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Publication : Metabolic correlates to critical speed in murine models of sickle cell disease.

First Author  Cendali FI Year  2023
Journal  Front Physiol Volume  14
Pages  1151268 PubMed ID  37007990
Mgi Jnum  J:345251 Mgi Id  MGI:7460669
Doi  10.3389/fphys.2023.1151268 Citation  Cendali FI, et al. (2023) Metabolic correlates to critical speed in murine models of sickle cell disease. Front Physiol 14:1151268
abstractText  Introduction: Exercise intolerance is a common clinical manifestation in patients with sickle cell disease (SCD), though the mechanisms are incompletely understood. Methods: Here we leverage a murine mouse model of sickle cell disease, the Berkeley mouse, to characterize response to exercise via determination of critical speed (CS), a functional measurement of mouse running speed upon exerting to exhaustion. Results: Upon observing a wide distribution in critical speed phenotypes, we systematically determined metabolic aberrations in plasma and organs-including heart, kidney, liver, lung, and spleen-from mice ranked based on critical speed performances (top vs. bottom 25%). Results indicated clear signatures of systemic and organ-specific alterations in carboxylic acids, sphingosine 1-phosphate and acylcarnitine metabolism. Metabolites in these pathways showed significant correlations with critical speed across all matrices. Findings from murine models were thus further validated in 433 sickle cell disease patients (SS genotype). Metabolomics analyses of plasma from 281 subjects in this cohort (with HbA < 10% to decrease confounding effects of recent transfusion events) were used to identify metabolic correlates to sub-maximal exercise test performances, as measure by 6 min walking test in this clinical cohort. Results confirmed strong correlation between test performances and dysregulated levels of circulating carboxylic acids (especially succinate) and sphingosine 1-phosphate. Discussion: We identified novel circulating metabolic markers of exercise intolerance in mouse models of sickle cell disease and sickle cell patients.
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