AI Article Synopsis

  • Scientists studied how PRV-1, a virus, affects Atlantic salmon by looking for specific signs in their blood called metabolites.
  • They compared healthy salmon with sick ones at different stages of the disease to see how the virus changed things inside the fish.
  • They found that the virus really messed up the way fats are processed in the salmon’s body, which helped them learn more about how the disease develops.

Article Abstract

Metabolomic analysis has been explored to search for disease biomarkers in humans for some time. The application to animal species, including fish, however, is still at the beginning. In the present study, we have used targeted and untargeted metabolomics to identify metabolites in the plasma of Atlantic salmon () challenged with (PRV-1), aiming to find metabolites associated with the progression of PRV-1 infection into heart and skeletal muscle inflammation (HSMI). The metabolomes of control and PRV-1-infected salmon were compared at three time points during disease development by employing different biostatistical approaches. Targeted metabolomics resulted in the determination of affected metabolites and metabolic pathways, revealing a substantial impact of PRV-1 infection on lipid homeostasis, especially on several (lyso)phosphatidylcholines, ceramides, and triglycerides. Untargeted metabolomics showed a clear separation of the treatment groups at later study time points, mainly due to effects on lipid metabolism pathways. In a subsequent multi-omics approach, we combined both metabolomics datasets with previously reported proteomics data generated from the same salmon plasma samples. Data processing with DIABLO software resulted in the identification of significant metabolites and proteins that were representative of the HSMI development in the salmon.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11279234PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/metabo14070375DOI Listing

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