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Dynamic 1H NMR-based extracellular metabonomic analysis of oligodendroglia cells infected with herpes simplex virus type 1
被引:0
|作者:
Rongzhong Huang
Hongchang Gao
Lihua Ma
Xiao Wang
Jianmin Jia
Mingju Wang
Liang Zhang
Xia Liu
Peng Zheng
Liu Yang
Lei Yang
Li Dan
Xie Peng
机构:
[1] The First Affiliated Hospital,Department of Neurology
[2] Chongqing Medical University,Department of Pharmacy
[3] Wenzhou Medical College,Department of Pathology, Faculty of Basic Medicine
[4] Chongqing Key Laboratory of Neurobiology,undefined
[5] Institute of Neuroscience,undefined
[6] Chongqing Medical University,undefined
[7] Chongqing Medical University,undefined
来源:
关键词:
Herpes simplex virus type 1;
HSV-1;
Metabonomic;
Metabolomic;
Metabolic;
Oligodendroglia;
D O I:
暂无
中图分类号:
学科分类号:
摘要:
Herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1) is a large, neurotropic, double-stranded DNA virus that establishes a lifelong latent infection in neurons and glial cells. Previous studies reveal that several metabolic perturbations are associated with HSV-1 infection. However, the extracellular metabolic alterations associated with HSV-1 infection have not been systematically profiled in human cells. Here, a proton nuclear magnetic resonance-based metabonomic approach was applied to differentiate the extracellular metabonomic profiles of HSV-1 infected human oligodendroglia cells (n = 18) and matched control cells (n = 18) at three time points (12, 24, and 36 h post-infection). Resulting spectra were analyzed by chemometric and statistical methods. Metabonomic profiling revealed perturbations in 21 extracellular metabolites. Partial least squares discriminant analysis demonstrated that the whole metabolic patterns enabled statistical discrimination between HSV-1 infected human oligodendroglia cells and control cells. Eight extracellular metabolites, seven of which were amino acids, were primarily responsible for score plot discrimination between HSV-1 infected human oligodendroglia cells and control cells at 36 h post-infection: alanine, glycine, isoleucine, leucine, glutamate, glutamine, histidine, and lactate. HSV-1 infection alters amino acid metabolism in human oligodendroglia cells cultured in vitro. HSV-1 infection may disturb these host cellular pathways to support viral replication. Through elucidating the extracellular metabolic changes incident to HSV-1 infection, this study also provides future directions for investigation into the pathogenic mechanism of HSV-1.
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页码:33 / 41
页数:8
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