Article: ¹H NMR Signals from Urine Excreted Protein Are a Source of Bias in Probabilistic Quotient Normalization
Analytical chemistry. 2022 May 03, v. 94, no. 19
2022
Abstract: ... to systematic variation shared across a large proportion of the spectral profile (>50%). Where ¹H nuclear ... baseline and substantially impact the resulting profile. Using ¹H NMR profile measurements of spot ... of bias in ¹H NMR metabolic profiling studies which can be effectively mitigated using SMolESY or ...
Abstract | Normalization to account for variation in urinary dilution is crucial for interpretation of urine metabolic profiles. Probabilistic quotient normalization (PQN) is used routinely in metabolomics but is sensitive to systematic variation shared across a large proportion of the spectral profile (>50%). Where ¹H nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy is employed, the presence of urinary protein can elevate the spectral baseline and substantially impact the resulting profile. Using ¹H NMR profile measurements of spot urine samples collected from hospitalized COVID-19 patients in the ISARIC 4C study, we determined that PQN coefficients are significantly correlated with observed protein levels (r² = 0.423, p < 2.2 × 10–¹⁶). This correlation was significantly reduced (r² = 0.163, p < 2.2 × 10–¹⁶) when using a computational method for suppression of macromolecular signals known as small molecule enhancement spectroscopy (SMolESY) for proteinic baseline removal prior to PQN. These results highlight proteinuria as a common yet overlooked source of bias in ¹H NMR metabolic profiling studies which can be effectively mitigated using SMolESY or other macromolecular signal suppression methods before estimation of normalization coefficients. |
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Keywords | COVID-19 infection ; analytical chemistry ; metabolomics ; nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy ; proteinuria ; urine |
Language | English |
Dates of publication | 2022-0503 |
Size | p. 6919-6923. |
Publishing place | American Chemical Society |
Document type | Article |
ZDB-ID | 1508-8 |
ISSN | 1520-6882 ; 0003-2700 |
ISSN (online) | 1520-6882 |
ISSN | 0003-2700 |
DOI | 10.1021/acs.analchem.2c00466 |
Database | NAL-Catalogue (AGRICOLA) |
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