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High-Resolution Mass Spectrometry for Human Exposomics: Expanding Chemical Space Coverage

Authors :
Lai, Yunjia
Koelmel, Jeremy P.
Walker, Douglas I.
Price, Elliott J.
Papazian, Stefano
Manz, Katherine E.
Castilla-Fernández, Delia
Bowden, John A.
Nikiforov, Vladimir
David, Arthur
Bessonneau, Vincent
Amer, Bashar
Seethapathy, Suresh
Hu, Xin
Lin, Elizabeth Z.
Jbebli, Akrem
McNeil, Brooklynn R.
Barupal, Dinesh
Cerasa, Marina
Xie, Hongyu
Kalia, Vrinda
Nandakumar, Renu
Singh, Randolph
Tian, Zhenyu
Gao, Peng
Zhao, Yujia
Froment, Jean
Rostkowski, Pawel
Dubey, Saurabh
Coufalíková, Kateřina
Seličová, Hana
Hecht, Helge
Liu, Sheng
Udhani, Hanisha H.
Restituito, Sophie
Tchou-Wong, Kam-Meng
Lu, Kun
Martin, Jonathan W.
Warth, Benedikt
Godri Pollitt, Krystal J.
Klánová, Jana
Fiehn, Oliver
Metz, Thomas O.
Pennell, Kurt D.
Jones, Dean P.
Miller, Gary W.
Source :
Environmental Science & Technology; 20240101, Issue: Preprints
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

In the modern “omics” era, measurement of the human exposome is a critical missing link between genetic drivers and disease outcomes. High-resolution mass spectrometry (HRMS), routinely used in proteomics and metabolomics, has emerged as a leading technology to broadly profile chemical exposure agents and related biomolecules for accurate mass measurement, high sensitivity, rapid data acquisition, and increased resolution of chemical space. Non-targeted approaches are increasingly accessible, supporting a shift from conventional hypothesis-driven, quantitation-centric targeted analyses toward data-driven, hypothesis-generating chemical exposome-wide profiling. However, HRMS-based exposomics encounters unique challenges. New analytical and computational infrastructures are needed to expand the analysis coverage through streamlined, scalable, and harmonized workflows and data pipelines that permit longitudinal chemical exposome tracking, retrospective validation, and multi-omics integration for meaningful health-oriented inferences. In this article, we survey the literature on state-of-the-art HRMS-based technologies, review current analytical workflows and informatic pipelines, and provide an up-to-date reference on exposomic approaches for chemists, toxicologists, epidemiologists, care providers, and stakeholders in health sciences and medicine. We propose efforts to benchmark fit-for-purpose platforms for expanding coverage of chemical space, including gas/liquid chromatography–HRMS (GC-HRMS and LC-HRMS), and discuss opportunities, challenges, and strategies to advance the burgeoning field of the exposome.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
0013936X and 15205851
Issue :
Preprints
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Environmental Science & Technology
Publication Type :
Periodical
Accession number :
ejs66881193
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.est.4c01156