학술논문

Metabolomics of primary cutaneous melanoma and matched adjacent extratumoral microenvironment.
Document Type
article
Source
PLoS ONE, Vol 15, Iss 10, p e0240849 (2020)
Subject
Medicine
Science
Language
English
ISSN
1932-6203
Abstract
BackgroundMelanoma causes the vast majority of deaths attributable to skin cancer, largely due to its propensity for metastasis. To date, few studies have examined molecular changes between primary cutaneous melanoma and adjacent putatively normal skin. To broaden temporal inferences related to initiation of disease, we performed a metabolomics investigation of primary melanoma and matched extratumoral microenvironment (EM) tissues; and, to make inferences about progressive disease, we also compared unmatched metastatic melanoma tissues to EM tissues.MethodsUltra-high performance liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry-based metabolic profiling was performed on frozen human tissues.ResultsWe observed 824 metabolites as differentially abundant among 33 matched tissue samples, and 1,118 metabolites as differentially abundant between metastatic melanoma (n = 46) and EM (n = 34) after false discovery rate (FDR) adjustment (pConclusionsOverall, pathway-based results significantly distinguished melanoma tissues from EM in the metabolism of: ascorbate and aldarate, propanoate, tryptophan, histidine, and pyrimidine. Within pathways, the majority of individual metabolite abundances observed in comparisons of primary melanoma vs. EM and metastatic melanoma vs. EM were directionally consistent. This observed concordance suggests most identified compounds are implicated in the initiation or maintenance of melanoma.