Yeast Solutions and Hyperpolarization Enable Real-Time Observation of Metabolized Substrates Even at Natural Abundance.

Anal Chem

Section Biomedical Imaging, Molecular Imaging North Competence Center (MOIN CC), Department of Radiology and Neuroradiology, University Medical Center Kiel, Kiel University, Am Botanischen Garten 18, Kiel 24118, Germany.

Published: October 2024

Metabolic changes in an organism often occur much earlier than macroscopic manifestations of disease, such as invasive tumors. Therefore, noninvasive tools to monitor metabolism are fundamental as they provide insights into in vivo biochemistry. NMR represents one of the gold standards for such insights by observing metabolites. Using nuclear spin hyperpolarization greatly increases the NMR sensitivity, enabling μmol/L sensitivity with a time resolution of about one second. However, a metabolic phantom with reproducible, rapid, and human-like metabolism is needed to progress research in this area. Using baker's yeast as a convenient metabolic factory, we demonstrated in a single study that yeast cells provide a robust and rapidly metabolizing phantom for pyruvate and fumarate, including substrates with a natural abundance of C: we observed the production of ethanol, carbon dioxide, bicarbonate, lactate, alanine from pyruvate, malate, and oxaloacetate from fumarate. For observation, we hyperpolarized pyruvate and fumarate via the dissolution dynamic nuclear polarization (dDNP) technique to about 30% C polarization that is equivalent to 360,000 signal enhancement at 1 T and 310 K. Major metabolic pathways were observed using tracers at a natural abundance of C, demonstrating that isotope labeling is not always essential in vitro. Enriched [1-C]pyruvate revealed minor lactate production, presumably via the D-lactate dehydrogenase (DLD) enzyme pathway, demonstrating the sensitivity gain using a dense yeast solution. We foresee that yeast as a metabolic factory can find application as an abundant MRI phantom standard to calibrate and optimize molecular MRI protocols. Our study highlights the potential of using hyperpolarization to probe the metabolism of yeast and other microorganisms even with naturally abundant substrates, offering valuable insights into their response to various stimuli such as drugs, treatment, nourishment, and genetic modification, thereby advancing drug development and our understanding of biochemical processes.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11525923PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.analchem.4c02419DOI Listing

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