Abstract

Global metabolomic profiling offers novel opportunities for the discovery of biomarkers and for the elucidation of pathogenic mechanisms that might lead to the development of novel therapies. GLUT1 deficiency syndrome (GLUT1-DS) is an inborn error of metabolism due to reduced function of glucose transporter type 1. Clinical presentation of GLUT1-DS is heterogeneous and the disorder mirrors patients with epilepsy, movement disorders, or any paroxysmal events or unexplained neurological manifestation triggered by exercise or fasting. The diagnostic biochemical hallmark of the disease is a reduced cerebrospinal fluid (CSF)/blood glucose ratio and the only available treatment is ketogenic diet. This study aimed at advancing our understanding of the biochemical perturbations in GLUT1-DS pathogenesis through biochemical phenotyping and the treatment of GLUT1-DS with a ketogenic diet. Metabolomic analysis of three CSF samples from GLUT1-DS patients not on ketogenic diet was feasible inasmuch as CSF sampling was used for diagnosis before to start with ketogenic diet. The analysis of plasma and urine samples obtained from GLUT1-DS patients treated with a ketogenic diet showed alterations in lipid and amino acid profiles. While subtle, these were consistent findings across the patients with GLUT1-DS on ketogenic diet, suggesting impacts on mitochondrial physiology. Moreover, low levels of free carnitine were present suggesting its consumption in GLUT1-DS on ketogenic diet. 3-hydroxybutyrate, 3-hydroxybutyrylcarnitine, 3-methyladipate, and N-acetylglycine were identified as potential biomarkers of GLUT1-DS on ketogenic diet. This is the first study to identify CSF, plasma, and urine metabolites associated with GLUT1-DS, as well as biochemical changes impacted by a ketogenic diet. Potential biomarkers and metabolic insights deserve further investigation.

Highlights

  • Metabolomic profiling is a semi-quantitative, unbiased analysis that looks at perturbations in metabolism

  • We performed traditional clinical cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) amino acid evaluation on the same CSF sample submitted for metabolomic profiling; no amino acid abnormalities were detected

  • Reduced brain glucose transport associated with glucose transporter type 1 (GLUT1) lowered activity or deficiency is the hallmark of GLUT1-DS

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Summary

Introduction

Metabolomic profiling is a semi-quantitative, unbiased analysis that looks at perturbations in metabolism. Metabolomics can be used for the diagnosis of inborn errors of metabolism (IEMs) enabling the simultaneous analysis of ~800 metabolites (amino acids, organic acids, fatty acids, neurotransmitters, nucleotides, cofactors and vitamins, bile acids, and other molecules

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