NMR based cerebrum metabonomic analysis reveals simultaneous interconnected changes during chick embryo incubation

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Abstract

To find out if content changes of the major functional cerebrum metabolites are interconnected and formed a network during the brain development, we obtained high-resolution magic-angle-spinning (HR-MAS) 1H NMR spectra of cerebrum tissues of chick embryo aged from incubation day 10 to 20, and postnatal day 1, and analyzed the data with principal component analysis (PCA). Within the examined time window, 26 biological important molecules were identified and 12 of them changed their relative concentration significantly in a time-dependent manner. These metabolites are generally belonged to three categories, neurotransmitters, nutrition sources, and neuronal or glial markers. The relative concentration changes of the metabolites were interconnected among/between the categories, and, more interestingly, associated with the number and size of Nissl-positive neurons. These results provided valuable biochemical and neurochemical information to understand the development of the embryonic brain. Copyright:

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Feng, Y., Zhu, H., Zhang, X., Wang, X., Xu, F., Tang, H., … Liu, M. (2015). NMR based cerebrum metabonomic analysis reveals simultaneous interconnected changes during chick embryo incubation. PLoS ONE, 10(10). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0139948

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