Assessing the influence of sleep and sampling time on metabolites in oral fluid: implications for metabolomics studies.

IF 3.5 3区 医学 Q2 ENDOCRINOLOGY & METABOLISM Metabolomics Pub Date : 2024-08-07 DOI:10.1007/s11306-024-02158-3
Michael Scholz, Andrea Eva Steuer, Akos Dobay, Hans-Peter Landolt, Thomas Kraemer
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Abstract

Introduction: The human salivary metabolome is a rich source of information for metabolomics studies. Among other influences, individual differences in sleep-wake history and time of day may affect the metabolome.

Objectives: We aimed to characterize the influence of a single night of sleep deprivation compared to sufficient sleep on the metabolites present in oral fluid and to assess the implications of sampling time points for the design of metabolomics studies.

Methods: Oral fluid specimens of 13 healthy young males were obtained in Salivette® devices at regular intervals in both a control condition (repeated 8-hour sleep) and a sleep deprivation condition (total sleep deprivation of 8 h, recovery sleep of 8 h) and their metabolic contents compared in a semi-targeted metabolomics approach.

Results: Analysis of variance results showed factor 'time' (i.e., sampling time point) representing the major influencer (median 9.24%, range 3.02-42.91%), surpassing the intervention of sleep deprivation (median 1.81%, range 0.19-12.46%). In addition, we found about 10% of all metabolic features to have significantly changed in at least one time point after a night of sleep deprivation when compared to 8 h of sleep.

Conclusion: The majority of significant alterations in metabolites' abundances were found when sampled in the morning hours, which can lead to subsequent misinterpretations of experimental effects in metabolomics studies. Beyond applying a within-subject design with identical sample collection times, we highly recommend monitoring participants' sleep-wake schedules prior to and during experiments, even if the study focus is not sleep-related (e.g., via actigraphy).

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评估睡眠和采样时间对口腔液中代谢物的影响:对代谢组学研究的意义。
简介人类唾液代谢组是代谢组学研究的丰富信息来源。除其他影响因素外,睡眠-觉醒史和一天中时间的个体差异也可能影响代谢组:我们的目的是描述与充足睡眠相比,一夜睡眠不足对口腔液中代谢物的影响,并评估采样时间点对代谢组学研究设计的影响:在对照条件(重复睡眠 8 小时)和睡眠剥夺条件(完全睡眠剥夺 8 小时,恢复睡眠 8 小时)下,用 Salivette® 装置定期采集 13 名健康年轻男性的口腔液标本,并采用半靶向代谢组学方法比较其代谢物含量:方差分析结果显示,"时间 "因素(即采样时间点)是主要影响因素(中位数为 9.24%,范围为 3.02-42.91%),超过了睡眠剥夺干预因素(中位数为 1.81%,范围为 0.19-12.46%)。此外,我们还发现,与 8 小时睡眠相比,大约 10% 的代谢特征在剥夺睡眠一夜后的至少一个时间点发生了显著变化:结论:大部分代谢物丰度的重大变化都是在早晨采样时发现的,这可能会导致代谢组学研究中对实验效果的误解。除了采用相同样本采集时间的受试者内设计外,我们强烈建议在实验前和实验过程中监测受试者的睡眠-觉醒时间表,即使研究重点与睡眠无关(如通过动图)。
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来源期刊
Metabolomics
Metabolomics 医学-内分泌学与代谢
CiteScore
6.60
自引率
2.80%
发文量
84
审稿时长
2 months
期刊介绍: Metabolomics publishes current research regarding the development of technology platforms for metabolomics. This includes, but is not limited to: metabolomic applications within man, including pre-clinical and clinical pharmacometabolomics for precision medicine metabolic profiling and fingerprinting metabolite target analysis metabolomic applications within animals, plants and microbes transcriptomics and proteomics in systems biology Metabolomics is an indispensable platform for researchers using new post-genomics approaches, to discover networks and interactions between metabolites, pharmaceuticals, SNPs, proteins and more. Its articles go beyond the genome and metabolome, by including original clinical study material together with big data from new emerging technologies.
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