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The itaconate shunt hypothesis

Discussion in 'Possible causes and predisposing factor discussion' started by Jaybee00, Jul 12, 2022.

  1. Simon M

    Simon M Senior Member (Voting Rights)

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    Very good to hear there are more studies in the pipeline.

    Am I right in thinking that other metabolomics studies (Lipkin, Hansen, maybe Unutmaz, Naviaux) didn't find increased use of glutamine/ate?
    Though I note this:
     
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  2. Sasha

    Sasha Senior Member (Voting Rights)

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    Is this the sort of hypothesis that the DecodeME GWAS study could rule in or out?
     
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  3. Jonathan Edwards

    Jonathan Edwards Senior Member (Voting Rights)

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    I don't get the impression that the hypothesis is well enough formulated as yet to be testable by anything much. If it was I suspect it would be most easily testable by simple MRI spectroscopy of tissues before and after exercise. If the problem is really a shortage of energy supply from a diverted metabolic pathway then different levels of metabolites would show up in a very predictable way.

    DecodeME would only be relevant if the hypothesis stated what possible genetic predisposing factors might occur such that an immune response might lead to an unusual diversion.
     
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  4. Kitty

    Kitty Senior Member (Voting Rights)

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    Would this be likely to hold, no matter what type of metabolic diversion were in place?

    (I suspect life's not that simple, but it sounds so much like what we need that I thought I'd wonder about it aloud anyway...)
     
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  5. Jonathan Edwards

    Jonathan Edwards Senior Member (Voting Rights)

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    I cannot answer that for sure. However, in the 1980s I worked in the next lab to people who did MR spectroscopy and they showed plots with peaks for pretty much any metabolite you might be interested in as far as I remember.

    If cells are really running out of ATP or pyruvate or whatever it ought to be possible to show some shifts in at least some of these peaks. And of course if you have different proportional shifts in a range of metabolites you should be able to work out roughly where the blockage is.

    I suspect the reason why it is not used more in ME is that it has been tried and nothing found. Some recent stuff looked at lactate in brain ventricles, so you can do lactate. Even that did not seem to be followed up.
     
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  6. Midnattsol

    Midnattsol Moderator Staff Member

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    Finding a peak doesn't mean one is able to identify the metabolite that belongs to the peak (talking metabolomics).
     
  7. Hoopoe

    Hoopoe Senior Member (Voting Rights)

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    I've been going swimming almost every day lately and there is a trend of finding it increasingly difficult over time. I keep having to reduce the time and intensity and have to spend more time horizontally during the rest of the day. This is similar to other periods in my life so it's probably not due to confounders like say the heat wave. There has to be some way to measure what is changing in my body that is causing this. My heart rate doesn't seem to have increased, if anything it's slightly lower. This seems consistent with some degree of cardiovascular training occurring but for whatever reason I'm getting weaker.

    PS: regular swimming was an attempt to see if I could recreate my substantial improvement that occurred last summer but this year it's just not happening it seems.
     
    Last edited: Jul 15, 2022
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  8. roller*

    roller* Senior Member (Voting Rights)

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    would this be a typical "wasting disease"?

    my blood-creatinine values (these values paralyzed ppl usually have):
    2009 = 0.68 mg/dL (Range 0.60 - 1.10)
    2022 = 0.64 mg/dL (Range 0.67-1.17) DOWN!!

    I have been on a (at least once) weekly extraordinary strengeous exercise since october 2021.
    The very minimum is 9 hours in a row with heavy equipment.
    i think i got (slooooowlly...) some "muscles" which are still invisible.

    could this "wasting theory" explain, that the additional exercise-creatinine is used for more energy-production?
    i do have strikingly more energy.

    but it took months und it would be of course still from the "wrong cycle".

    and the liver values are still as bad as they were.
    there is potassium above the range (Hyperkalemia), which indicates cardiac issues, ie. not sufficient muscle to keep heart rate up
     
    Last edited: Jul 15, 2022
  9. Kitty

    Kitty Senior Member (Voting Rights)

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    Thank you, that's interesting. I suppose it partly comes down to money—it doesn't sound like a particularly cheap technique, and it might be more difficult than it looks at first sight to get the timing right.

    No, but perhaps if you could show something odd was going on, it might provide enough of an evidence base to get more research funded. And you'd be able to discuss it with people who're finding oddnesses in other conditions, which might help you direct your investigation. It's the sort of thing that needs to happen to move us forward.
     
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  10. Jonathan Edwards

    Jonathan Edwards Senior Member (Voting Rights)

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    Well, when I was shown these peaks each one was clearly identified as lactate or glutamate or pyruvate or whatever. There was lots of them. As far as I know each molecule has a particular signature that is known beforehand.
     
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  11. Jonathan Edwards

    Jonathan Edwards Senior Member (Voting Rights)

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    I doubt it has much to do with money. These are machines that have been available since maybe the 1960s, at least since 1980. They do not require the complicated set up of MR imaging although they need a powerful magnet. My guess would be that once you have a machine studies cost rather little.It may be that to get results relating to effects of exercise you need to make use of glucose labelled with a carbon isotope to follow the metabolism through. I forget. But I don't think cost is an issue.

    I just think that it must be that when people with ME were studied nothing showed up - which makes it hard to sustain any theory that puts symptoms down to failure of metabolic pathways I think.
     
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  12. Hoopoe

    Hoopoe Senior Member (Voting Rights)

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    A study by Morten and his Polish collaborators found a decrease in central energy metabolism in patients with ME/CFS when comparing pre and post exercise program timepoints. There was no control group so this was not published.

    This study of exercise for long covid also seems to be reporting something similar: "a decrease of oxidative metabolism index of 6.89 standard units."

    https://www.s4me.info/threads/can-a...-long-covid-outcomes-2022-lobanov-et-al.28618
     
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  13. Midnattsol

    Midnattsol Moderator Staff Member

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    While many molecules have easily identifiable signatures/peaks this is not true for all, and even for those that have these easily identifiable peaks noise in the data can make it difficult. Look at untargeted metabolomics studies and there will e a number of unknown metabolites. For targetted metabolomics an issue is that different labs include different metabolites so comparing across studies is not possible since not all studies will include the same metabolites. While I'd be surprised to not see glutamate, I would not be surprised if lactate or pyruvate wasn't looked at, but there might be differences between fields I guess.
     
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  14. Hutan

    Hutan Moderator Staff Member

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    Yes, we've talked about this problem with mass spectroscopy elsewhere on the forum. Here's something from a 2010 paper. I'm sure that there has been progress since then, but there are still problems:
    Edit to add - here's a 2019 paper that is a relatively up to date survey of mass spectroscopy for metabolite identification:
    Mass spectrometry-based metabolomics in health and medical science: a systematic review
     
    Last edited: Jul 16, 2022
  15. Midnattsol

    Midnattsol Moderator Staff Member

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    You would not necessarily get something odd, or anything that can be discussed besides "there are many metabolites we can't identify or quantify". When data is shared it might be possible for others to help identify/make sense of the peaks, but it is simply not always possible (and data sharing is not the standard it should be! A lot of metabolomics studies still only report whatever the researchers found interesting, like ten or twenty out of a set of several 100s. Had the data on the other metabolites also been available in an easy way it would be much easier to collaborate.
     
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  16. Jonathan Edwards

    Jonathan Edwards Senior Member (Voting Rights)

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    I was talking about magnetic resonance spectroscopy rather than mass spectroscopy.
     
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  17. Jonathan Edwards

    Jonathan Edwards Senior Member (Voting Rights)

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    Sure, but if the claim is that symptoms are due to failure of major respiratory pathways preventing energy usage then surely some easily identified molecules would show shifts. You might not be able to track exactly why but if there isn't even a shift in the some common pathway elements it is hard to sustain a theory based on energy blockade. I am not familiar with the detail but I am sceptical of fancy 'trap' theories that do not seem to take into account the need to show something pretty simple at the end of the day - not enough of some common energy pathway product.
     
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  18. Hutan

    Hutan Moderator Staff Member

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    From that 2019 paper I mentioned above re NMR:
    NMR does seem to be much better for identification of novel compounds. It sounds, though, that you need a lot more of a metabolite (10 to 100 x what MS will work with) for NMR to find it. For anyone just learning, this 2019 paper seems good;
    NMR Spectroscopy for Metabolomics Research

    You may well be right. It's hard to remember what exactly has been been done so far, and the potential problems with each study. I just know that we've seen a lot of research that has been, in many ways, poor or technically limited. So I wouldn't necessarily assume there's nothing left to find.

    Yesterday I had to go for a long walk, and the impact of that on my leg muscles, the inability to function smoothly, and huge loss of power, and the pain in the night makes me think there must surely be some metabolite to find that would explain why that happens.
     
    Last edited: Jul 16, 2022
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  19. Jonathan Edwards

    Jonathan Edwards Senior Member (Voting Rights)

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    Yes, but if you do NMR on a whole leg you have plenty of metabolite! You can do NMR on arms and legs without disturbing the patient at all - other than asking them to put a leg in a ring magnet.
     
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  20. SNT Gatchaman

    SNT Gatchaman Senior Member (Voting Rights)

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    For MR spectroscopy in clinical imaging, we typically target a voxel. For metabolic diseases this is usually standardised to the left lentiform nucleus, but looks like right thalamus in the example below. Lactate, NAA, creatine and choline are the typical metabolites of interest in the brain. In the normal example below there's no lactate peak (at 1.3 ppm).

    Glutamine/glutamate and GABA are both 2.2-2.4 ppm so may not be discriminated.

    Usual peaks
    • lipids: 1.3 ppm
    • lactate: 1.33 ppm
    • alanine: 1.48 ppm
    • N-acetylaspartate (NAA): 2.0 ppm
    • glutamine/glutamate: 2.2-2.4 ppm
    • GABA: 2.2-2.4 ppm
    • 2-hydroxyglutarate: 2.25 ppm 6
    • citrate: resonates 2.6 ppm
    • creatine: 3.0 ppm
    • choline: 3.2 ppm
    • myo-inositol: 3.5 ppm
    • water: 4.7 ppm
    Less common peaks
    • propylene glycol: 1.14 ppm
    • ethanol: 1.16 ppm
    • acetate: 1.9 ppm
    • acetone: 2.22 ppm
    • acetoacetate: 2.29 ppm
    • succinate: 2.4 ppm
    • methylsulfonylmethane: 3.15 ppm
    • scyllo-inositol: 3.36 ppm
    • taurine: 3.4 ppm
    • glucose: 3.43 ppm and 3.8 ppm
    • mannitol: 3.78 ppm
    • creatine (second peak): 3.95 ppm 10
    • lactate quartet: 4.11 ppm

    [​IMG]
     
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