학술논문

Metabolomics of post-mortem blood: identifying potential markers of post-mortem interval
Document Type
Original Paper
Source
Metabolomics: An Official Journal of the Metabolomics Society. February 2015 11(1):237-245
Subject
Post-mortem interval
Biochemical markers
Blood metabolites
Hypoxia
GC–MS
Forensic science
Amino acids
Language
English
ISSN
1573-3882
1573-3890
Abstract
Death results in changes in some metabolites in body tissues due to lack of circulating oxygen, altered enzymatic reactions, cellular degradation, and cessation of anabolic production of metabolites and macromolecules. Metabolic changes may provide chemical markers to better determine the time since death (post-mortem interval), something that is challenging to establish with current observation-based methodologies. The aim of this research was to carry out a metabolic analysis of blood plasma post-mortem, in order to gain a more complete understanding of the biochemical changes that occur following death. Gas chromatography was used to conduct a survey of post-mortem rat blood. Sixty six metabolites were detected post-mortem. Twenty six of these [18 amino acids, glutathione (GSH), 4-Amino-n-butyric acid (GABA), glyoxylate, oxalate, hydroxyproline, creatinine, α-ketoglutarate and succinate] had increased concentrations post-mortem. The remaining 40 metabolites had concentrations that were not dependant on time. This study demonstrates the range of metabolic changes that occur post-mortem as well as identifying potential markers for estimating post-mortem interval.