TY - JOUR
T1 - Computational Metabolomics
T2 - A Framework for the Million Metabolome
AU - Uppal, Karan
AU - Walker, Douglas I.
AU - Liu, Ken
AU - Li, Shuzhao
AU - Go, Young Mi
AU - Jones, Dean P.
N1 - Funding Information:
The authors acknowledge support by NIH grants ES023485, ES019776, HL113451, OD018006, AG038746, ES025632, and HL086773, California Breast Cancer Research Program 21UB- 8002, and NIH c o n t r a c t s 1U2CES026560-01 , HHSN272201200031C, and HHSN27200009.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2016 American Chemical Society.
PY - 2016/12/19
Y1 - 2016/12/19
N2 - "Sola dosis facit venenum." These words of Paracelsus, "the dose makes the poison", can lead to a cavalier attitude concerning potential toxicities of the vast array of low abundance environmental chemicals to which humans are exposed. Exposome research teaches that 80-85% of human disease is linked to environmental exposures. The human exposome is estimated to include >400,000 environmental chemicals, most of which are uncharacterized with regard to human health. In fact, mass spectrometry measures >200,000 m/z features (ions) in microliter volumes derived from human samples; most are unidentified. This crystallizes a grand challenge for chemical research in toxicology: to develop reliable and affordable analytical methods to understand health impacts of the extensive human chemical experience. To this end, there appears to be no choice but to abandon the limitations of measuring one chemical at a time. The present review looks at progress in computational metabolomics to provide probability-based annotation linking ions to known chemicals and serve as a foundation for unambiguous designation of unidentified ions for toxicologic study. We review methods to characterize ions in terms of accurate mass m/z, chromatographic retention time, correlation of adduct, isotopic and fragment forms, association with metabolic pathways and measurement of collision-induced dissociation products, collision cross section, and chirality. Such information can support a largely unambiguous system for documenting unidentified ions in environmental surveillance and human biomonitoring. Assembly of this data would provide a resource to characterize and understand health risks of the array of low-abundance chemicals to which humans are exposed.
AB - "Sola dosis facit venenum." These words of Paracelsus, "the dose makes the poison", can lead to a cavalier attitude concerning potential toxicities of the vast array of low abundance environmental chemicals to which humans are exposed. Exposome research teaches that 80-85% of human disease is linked to environmental exposures. The human exposome is estimated to include >400,000 environmental chemicals, most of which are uncharacterized with regard to human health. In fact, mass spectrometry measures >200,000 m/z features (ions) in microliter volumes derived from human samples; most are unidentified. This crystallizes a grand challenge for chemical research in toxicology: to develop reliable and affordable analytical methods to understand health impacts of the extensive human chemical experience. To this end, there appears to be no choice but to abandon the limitations of measuring one chemical at a time. The present review looks at progress in computational metabolomics to provide probability-based annotation linking ions to known chemicals and serve as a foundation for unambiguous designation of unidentified ions for toxicologic study. We review methods to characterize ions in terms of accurate mass m/z, chromatographic retention time, correlation of adduct, isotopic and fragment forms, association with metabolic pathways and measurement of collision-induced dissociation products, collision cross section, and chirality. Such information can support a largely unambiguous system for documenting unidentified ions in environmental surveillance and human biomonitoring. Assembly of this data would provide a resource to characterize and understand health risks of the array of low-abundance chemicals to which humans are exposed.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85006836369&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1021/acs.chemrestox.6b00179
DO - 10.1021/acs.chemrestox.6b00179
M3 - Review article
C2 - 27629808
AN - SCOPUS:85006836369
SN - 0893-228X
VL - 29
SP - 1956
EP - 1975
JO - Chemical Research in Toxicology
JF - Chemical Research in Toxicology
IS - 12
ER -