Metabolites and metabolic pathways associated with glucocorticoid resistance in pregnant African-American women

Glucocorticoid resistance (GR) is associated with exposure to chronic stress and an increased risk of metabolic and inflammatory disorders in both animal and human populations. Studies on ethnic disparities highlight the African-American (AA) population as having a high propensity to both GR and chr...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Elizabeth Corwin, Anne L. Dunlop, Jolyn Fernandes, Shuzhao Li, Bradley Pearce, Dean P. Jones
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2020-02-01
Series:Comprehensive Psychoneuroendocrinology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2666497620300011
id doaj-d0ffdf8e54bc49e381316850919f56ae
record_format Article
spelling doaj-d0ffdf8e54bc49e381316850919f56ae2021-05-04T07:33:25ZengElsevierComprehensive Psychoneuroendocrinology2666-49762020-02-011100001Metabolites and metabolic pathways associated with glucocorticoid resistance in pregnant African-American womenElizabeth Corwin0Anne L. Dunlop1Jolyn Fernandes2Shuzhao Li3Bradley Pearce4Dean P. Jones5Columbia University, United States; Corresponding author.Emory University School of Medicine and School of Nursing, Emory University, United StatesSchool of Medicine, Emory University, United StatesSchool of Medicine, Emory University, United StatesRollins School of Public Health, Emory University, United StatesSchool of Medicine, Emory University, United StatesGlucocorticoid resistance (GR) is associated with exposure to chronic stress and an increased risk of metabolic and inflammatory disorders in both animal and human populations. Studies on ethnic disparities highlight the African-American (AA) population as having a high propensity to both GR and chronic stress exposure. Glucocorticoids and inflammation play a very important role in pregnancy outcome and fetal development. To date, however, the metabolites and metabolic pathways associated with GR during pregnancy have not been identified, obscuring the mechanisms by which adverse health consequences arise, and thus impeding targeted therapeutic intervention. The objective of this study was to perform untargeted high-resolution metabolomics (HRM) profiling on 273 pregnant AA women, to identify metabolites and metabolic pathways associated with GR during the first trimester of pregnancy and to evaluate their cross-sectional association with birth outcomes and psychosocial variables related to chronic stress exposure. For this study, GR was determined by the concentration of dexamethasone required for 50% inhibition (Dex IC50) of the cytokine tumor-necrosis factor alpha (TNF-alpha) release in vitro in response to a standard dose of lipopolysaccharide. The results for Metabolome-Wide Association Studies (MWAS) and pathway enrichment analysis for serum metabolic associations with Dex IC50, showed energy (nicotinamide and TCA cycle), amino acid, and glycosphingolipid metabolism as top altered pathways. Bioinformatic analysis showed that GR, as indicated by elevated Dex IC50 in the pregnant women, was associated with increased inflammatory metabolites, oxidative stress related metabolites, increased demand for functional amino acids to support growth and development, and disruption in energy-related metabolites. If confirmed in future studies, targeting these physiologically significant metabolites and metabolic pathways may lead to future assessment and intervention strategies to prevent inflammatory and metabolic complications observed in pregnant populations.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2666497620300011MetabolomicsGlucocorticoid resistanceHealth disparityPregnancyStressMetabolites
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Elizabeth Corwin
Anne L. Dunlop
Jolyn Fernandes
Shuzhao Li
Bradley Pearce
Dean P. Jones
spellingShingle Elizabeth Corwin
Anne L. Dunlop
Jolyn Fernandes
Shuzhao Li
Bradley Pearce
Dean P. Jones
Metabolites and metabolic pathways associated with glucocorticoid resistance in pregnant African-American women
Comprehensive Psychoneuroendocrinology
Metabolomics
Glucocorticoid resistance
Health disparity
Pregnancy
Stress
Metabolites
author_facet Elizabeth Corwin
Anne L. Dunlop
Jolyn Fernandes
Shuzhao Li
Bradley Pearce
Dean P. Jones
author_sort Elizabeth Corwin
title Metabolites and metabolic pathways associated with glucocorticoid resistance in pregnant African-American women
title_short Metabolites and metabolic pathways associated with glucocorticoid resistance in pregnant African-American women
title_full Metabolites and metabolic pathways associated with glucocorticoid resistance in pregnant African-American women
title_fullStr Metabolites and metabolic pathways associated with glucocorticoid resistance in pregnant African-American women
title_full_unstemmed Metabolites and metabolic pathways associated with glucocorticoid resistance in pregnant African-American women
title_sort metabolites and metabolic pathways associated with glucocorticoid resistance in pregnant african-american women
publisher Elsevier
series Comprehensive Psychoneuroendocrinology
issn 2666-4976
publishDate 2020-02-01
description Glucocorticoid resistance (GR) is associated with exposure to chronic stress and an increased risk of metabolic and inflammatory disorders in both animal and human populations. Studies on ethnic disparities highlight the African-American (AA) population as having a high propensity to both GR and chronic stress exposure. Glucocorticoids and inflammation play a very important role in pregnancy outcome and fetal development. To date, however, the metabolites and metabolic pathways associated with GR during pregnancy have not been identified, obscuring the mechanisms by which adverse health consequences arise, and thus impeding targeted therapeutic intervention. The objective of this study was to perform untargeted high-resolution metabolomics (HRM) profiling on 273 pregnant AA women, to identify metabolites and metabolic pathways associated with GR during the first trimester of pregnancy and to evaluate their cross-sectional association with birth outcomes and psychosocial variables related to chronic stress exposure. For this study, GR was determined by the concentration of dexamethasone required for 50% inhibition (Dex IC50) of the cytokine tumor-necrosis factor alpha (TNF-alpha) release in vitro in response to a standard dose of lipopolysaccharide. The results for Metabolome-Wide Association Studies (MWAS) and pathway enrichment analysis for serum metabolic associations with Dex IC50, showed energy (nicotinamide and TCA cycle), amino acid, and glycosphingolipid metabolism as top altered pathways. Bioinformatic analysis showed that GR, as indicated by elevated Dex IC50 in the pregnant women, was associated with increased inflammatory metabolites, oxidative stress related metabolites, increased demand for functional amino acids to support growth and development, and disruption in energy-related metabolites. If confirmed in future studies, targeting these physiologically significant metabolites and metabolic pathways may lead to future assessment and intervention strategies to prevent inflammatory and metabolic complications observed in pregnant populations.
topic Metabolomics
Glucocorticoid resistance
Health disparity
Pregnancy
Stress
Metabolites
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2666497620300011
work_keys_str_mv AT elizabethcorwin metabolitesandmetabolicpathwaysassociatedwithglucocorticoidresistanceinpregnantafricanamericanwomen
AT anneldunlop metabolitesandmetabolicpathwaysassociatedwithglucocorticoidresistanceinpregnantafricanamericanwomen
AT jolynfernandes metabolitesandmetabolicpathwaysassociatedwithglucocorticoidresistanceinpregnantafricanamericanwomen
AT shuzhaoli metabolitesandmetabolicpathwaysassociatedwithglucocorticoidresistanceinpregnantafricanamericanwomen
AT bradleypearce metabolitesandmetabolicpathwaysassociatedwithglucocorticoidresistanceinpregnantafricanamericanwomen
AT deanpjones metabolitesandmetabolicpathwaysassociatedwithglucocorticoidresistanceinpregnantafricanamericanwomen
_version_ 1721479807598854144