AI Article Synopsis

  • NMR is an effective method for studying biological processes in living organisms, but traditional techniques can be slow and time-consuming, limiting monitoring capabilities.
  • Time-resolved non-uniform sampling NMR allows for rapid detection of metabolic responses to varying contaminant concentrations, significantly speeding up the process.
  • The study found that bisphenol A (BPA) induced a metabolic response at a very low concentration (∼0.1 mg/L) within just 16 minutes, indicating a complex response affecting protein degradation at higher levels, highlighting the utility of this method in toxicity research.

Article Abstract

nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) is a powerful analytical tool for probing complex biological processes inside living organisms. However, due to magnetic susceptibility broadening, which produces broad lines in one-dimensional NMR, H-C two-dimensional (2D) NMR is required for metabolite monitoring . As each 2D experiment is time-consuming, often hours, this limits the temporal resolution over which processes can be monitored. Furthermore, to understand concentration-dependent responses, studies are traditionally repeated using different contaminant and toxin concentrations, which can make studies prohibitively long (potentially months). In this study, time-resolved non-uniform sampling NMR is performed in the presence of a contaminant concentration sweep. The result is that the lowest concentration that elicits a metabolic response can be rapidly detected, while the metabolic pathways impacted provide information about the toxic mode of action of the toxin. The lowest concentration of bisphenol A (BPA) that induces a response was ∼0.1 mg/L (detected in just 16 min), while changes in different metabolites suggest a complex multipathway response that leads to protein degradation at higher BPA concentrations. This proof of concept shows it is possible, on the basis of "real-time" organism responses, to identify the sublethal concentration at which a toxin impacts an organism and thus represents an essential analytical tool for the next generation of toxicity-based research and monitoring.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.analchem.0c01370DOI Listing

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