A pilot study of the onset of hepatic encephalopathy (OHE) in mice induced by thioacetamide and the protective effect of taurine by holistic metabolic characterization

Abstract Hepatic encephalopathy (HE) is a severe neuropsychiatric complication due to acute or chronic liver failure. In this work, an acute thioacetamide induced HE mice model was established to investigate the metabolic events in the onset of HE (OHE) and the protective role of taurine (TAU). Sera for biochemical evaluation, and livers and cortexes for histopathological inspection and NMR-based metabolomic investigation were collected. Principal component analysis and orthogonal partial least squares-discriminant analysis were performed to excavate differential metabolites of OHE, and explore the protective role of TAU. Metabolites pathway analysis was performed on significant metabolites selected based on loading/S-plots and fold change plots to identify biologically meaningful metabolic patterns and relevant pathways. The most affected pathways in OHE mice were those along the liver–brain axis: among them, the alanine, aspartate and glutamate metabolism was the most important. TAU showed better performance in improving the disturbed metabolism in the cortex than in the liver of OHE mice. This pilot study based on metabolomics approach and pathway analysis should help to understand HE systematically, and to develop new therapy for HE.
Source: Metabolomics - Category: Biology Source Type: research