Abstract
Coenzyme A, acetyl coenzyme A, coenzymes of cellular energy, coenzymes of redox reactions, and antioxidants mediate biochemical reactions fundamental to the functioning of all living cells. There is an immense interest in measuring them routinely in biological specimens to gain insights into their roles in cellular functions and to help characterize the biological status. However, it is challenging to measure them ex vivo as they are sensitive to specimen harvesting, extraction, and measurement conditions. This challenge is largely underappreciated and carries the risk of grossly inaccurate measurements that lead to incorrect inferences. To date, several efforts have been focused on alleviating this challenge using NMR spectroscopy. However, a comprehensive solution for the measurement of the compounds in a wide variety of biological specimens is still lacking. As a part of addressing this challenge, we demonstrate here that the total pool of each group of unstable metabolites offers a starting place for the representation of labile metabolites in biological specimens. Based on this approach, in this proof-of-concept study, we determine the distribution of the labile compounds in different organs including heart, kidney, liver, brain, and skeletal muscle of a mouse model. The results were independently validated using different specimens and a different metabolite extraction protocol. Further, we show that both stable and unstable metabolites were distributed differentially in different organs, which signifies their differential functional roles, the knowledge of which is currently lacking for many metabolites. Intriguingly, the concentration of taurine, an amino sulfonic acid, in skeletal muscle is >30 mM, which is the highest for any metabolite in a mammalian tissue known to date. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first study to profile the whole body distribution of the labile and other high-concentration metabolites using NMR spectroscopy. The results may pave ways for gaining new insights into cellular functions in health and diseases.
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