1. Academic Validation
  2. Metabolomic profiling reveals serum L-pyroglutamic acid as a potential diagnostic biomarker for systemic lupus erythematosus

Metabolomic profiling reveals serum L-pyroglutamic acid as a potential diagnostic biomarker for systemic lupus erythematosus

  • Rheumatology (Oxford). 2021 Feb 1;60(2):598-606. doi: 10.1093/rheumatology/keaa126.
Qiong Zhang 1 2 Xin Li 1 Xiaofeng Yin 1 Haifang Wang 1 Chen Fu 1 Hongxia Wang 1 Kaifei Li 1 Yao Li 3 Xiaohe Zhang 1 Huijun Liang 1 Kui Li 4 Haixia Li 1 Yurong Qiu 1 4
Affiliations

Affiliations

  • 1 Laboratory Medicine Center, Nanfang Hospital, Southern Medical University, Guangdong, Guangdong, P.R. China.
  • 2 Clinic Laboratory, Zhuzhou Central Hospital, Hunan, China.
  • 3 Clinic Laboratory, Foshan Traditional Chinese Medicine Hospital, Guangdong, P.R. China.
  • 4 Huayin Medical Laboratory Center Co., Ltd, Guangdong, P.R. China.
Abstract

Objective: The spectrum of clinical manifestations and serological phenomena of SLE is heterogeneous among patients and even changes over time unpredictably in individual patients. For this reason, clinical diagnosis especially in complicated or atypical cases is often difficult or delayed leading to poor prognosis. Despite the medical progress nowadays in the understanding of SLE pathogenesis, disease-specific biomarkers for SLE remain an outstanding challenge. Therefore, we undertook this study to investigate potential biomarkers for SLE diagnosis.

Methods: Serum samples from 32 patients with SLE and 25 gender-matched healthy controls (HCs) were analysed by metabolic profiling based on liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry metabolomics platform. The further validation for the potential biomarker was performed in an independent set consisting of 36 SLE patients and 30 HCs.

Results: The metabolite profiles of serum samples allowed differentiation of SLE patients from HCs. The levels of arachidonic acid, sphingomyelin (SM) 24:1, monoacylglycerol (MG) 17:0, lysophosphatidyl ethanolamine (lysoPE) 18:0, lysoPE 16:0, lysophosphatidyl choline (lysoPC) 20:0, lysoPC 18:0 and adenosine were significantly decreased in SLE patients, and the MG 20:2 and L-pyroglutamic acid were significantly increased in SLE group. In addition, L-pyroglutamic acid achieved an area under the receiver-operating characteristic curve of 0.955 with high sensitivity (97.22%) and specificity (83.33%) at the cut-off of 61.54 μM in the further targeted metabolism, indicating diagnostic potential.

Conclusion: Serum metabolic profiling is differential between SLE patients and HCs and depicts increased L-pyroglutamic acid as a promising bitformatomarker for SLE.

Keywords

L-pyroglutamic acid; biomarker; metabolism; systemic lupus erythematosus.

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