Introduction: Pre-eclampsia is a hypertensive gestational disorder that affects approximately 5% of all pregnancies. Objectives: As the pathophysiological processes of pre-eclampsia are still uncertain, the present case–control study explored underlying metabolic processes characterising this disease. Methods: Maternal peripheral plasma samples were collected from pre-eclamptic (n = 32) and healthy pregnant women (n = 35) in the third trimester. After extraction, high-resolution mass spectrometry-based untargeted metabolomics was used to profile polar and apolar metabolites and the resulting data were analysed via uni- and multivariate statistical approaches. Results: The study demonstrated that the metabolome undergoes substantial changes in pre-eclamptic women. Amongst the most discriminative metabolites were hydroxyhexacosanoic acid, diacylglycerols, glycerophosphoinositols, nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide metabolites, bile acids and products of amino acid metabolism. Conclusions: The putatively identified compounds provide sources for novel hypotheses to help understanding of the underlying biochemical pathology of pre-eclampsia.
CITATION STYLE
Sander, K. N., Kim, D. H., Ortori, C. A., Warren, A. Y., Anyanwagu, U. C., Hay, D. P., … Barrett, D. A. (2019). Untargeted analysis of plasma samples from pre-eclamptic women reveals polar and apolar changes in the metabolome. Metabolomics, 15(12). https://doi.org/10.1007/s11306-019-1600-8
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