Metabolomic profiling of cerebrospinal fluid reveals metabolite
biomarkers in Tick-borne encephalitis Patient
Abstract
Tick-borne encephalitis virus (TBEV) can cause life-threatening CNS
infection. Changes in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) metabolites may reflect
critical aspects of host responses and end-organ damage in neuro
infection and neuroinflammation. In this study, we applied an untargeted
metabolomics screen of CSF samples to investigate the metabolites
profile and explore biomarkers for TBEV infection. By analyzing CSF
samples from 77 patients with TBEV infection and 23 without TBEV
infection, tryptophan metabolism and Citrate cycle were found to be the
top important metabolic pathways in differentiating the control and case
groups; acetoacetate, 5’-deoxy-5’-(methylthio)-adenosine,
3-methyl-2-oxobutanoic acid,etc. were identified to be metabolic
biomarkers(| log 2
FC|>1,VIP>1,FDR<0.05)in CSF and
clearly separated the TBEV infection from the non-infected samples.
Moreover, four metabolites were identified to be associated with fatal
outcome, including kynurenic acid, 5-hydroxyindole-3-acetic acid,
DL-tryptophan, indole-3-acrylic acid, demonstrating the potential
predictive biomarkers for severe TBEV infection. This study explored the
metabolic profile of TBEV infection both in CSF samples and identified
candidate biomarkers for TBEV infection, which might be useful in target
screening for differential diagnosis and therapeutic inter-vention.