Metabolomic-transcriptomic landscape of 8-epidiosbulbin E acetate -a major diterpenoid lactone from Dioscorea bulbifera tuber induces hepatotoxicity

Metabolomic-transcriptomic landscape of 8-epidiosbulbin E acetate -a major diterpenoid lactone from Dioscorea bulbifera tuber induces hepatotoxicity

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Journal Pre-proof Metabolomic-transcriptomic landscape of 8-epidiosbulbin E acetate -a major diterpenoid lactone from Dioscorea bulbifera tuber induces hepatotoxicity Wei Shi, Yan Jiang, Dong-Sheng Zhao, Li-Long Jiang, Feng-Jie Liu, Zi-Tian Wu, Zhuo-Qing Li, Ling-Li Wang, Jing Zhou, Ping Li, Hui-Jun Li PII:

S0278-6915(19)30677-5

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.fct.2019.110887

Reference:

FCT 110887

To appear in:

Food and Chemical Toxicology

Received Date: 9 April 2019 Revised Date:

8 October 2019

Accepted Date: 12 October 2019

Please cite this article as: Shi, W., Jiang, Y., Zhao, D.-S., Jiang, L.-L., Liu, F.-J., Wu, Z.-T., Li, Z.-Q., Wang, L.-L., Zhou, J., Li, P., Li, H.-J., Metabolomic-transcriptomic landscape of 8-epidiosbulbin E acetate -a major diterpenoid lactone from Dioscorea bulbifera tuber induces hepatotoxicity, Food and Chemical Toxicology (2019), doi: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.fct.2019.110887. This is a PDF file of an article that has undergone enhancements after acceptance, such as the addition of a cover page and metadata, and formatting for readability, but it is not yet the definitive version of record. This version will undergo additional copyediting, typesetting and review before it is published in its final form, but we are providing this version to give early visibility of the article. Please note that, during the production process, errors may be discovered which could affect the content, and all legal disclaimers that apply to the journal pertain. © 2019 Published by Elsevier Ltd.

1

Metabolomic-transcriptomic landscape of 8-epidiosbulbin E acetate

2

-a major diterpenoid lactone from Dioscorea bulbifera tuber induces

3

hepatotoxicity

4 a

b,*

a

a

a

5

Wei Shi , Yan Jiang , Dong-Sheng Zhao , Li-Long Jiang , Feng-Jie Liu , Zi-Tian

6

Wu , Zhuo-Qing Li , Ling-Li Wang , Jing Zhou , Ping Li , Hui-Jun Li

a

a

a

a

a

a,*

7 8 9 10

a

State Key Laboratory of Natural Medicines, China Pharmaceutical University,

Nanjing, 210009, China b

Nanjing Forestry University, Nanjing, 210037, China

11 12

*Corresponding Authors:

13

Hui-Jun Li, PhD

14

State Key Laboratory of Natural Medicines, China Pharmaceutical University, No. 24

15

Tongjia Lane, Nanjing 210009, China.

16

E-mail: [email protected].

17

Tel.: +86 25 83271382; Fax: +86 25 83271379.

18

Yan Jiang, PhD

19

Nanjing Forestry University, No. 159 Longpan Road, Nanjing 210037, China.

20

E-mail: [email protected].

21

Tel.: +86 25 83271382; Fax: +86 25 83271379.

22 1

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ABSTRACT

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Studies have shown that 8-epidiosbulbin E acetate (EEA), a major diterpenoid lactone

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in the tuber of Dioscorea bulbifera, can induce hepatotoxicity in vivo. However, the

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underlying mechanisms remain unknown. Using the integrated transcriptomic and

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metabolomics method, in this study we investigated the global effect of EEA exposure

28

on the transcriptomic and metabolomic profiles in mice. The abundance of 7131

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genes and 42 metabolites in the liver, as well as 43 metabolites in the serum were

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altered. It should be noted that EEA mainly damaged hepatic cells through the

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aberrant regulation of multiple systems primarily including bile acid metabolism, and

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taurine and hypotaurine metabolism. In addition, an imbalance of bile acid

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metabolism was found to play a key pat in response to EEA-triggered hepatotoxicity.

34

In summary, these findings contributed to understanding the underlying mechanisms

35

of EEA hepatotoxicity.

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Keywords: 8-Epidiosbulbin E acetate; Transcriptomics; Metabolomics; Hepatoto

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xicity; Bile acid metabolism

2

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1. Introduction

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Dioscorea bulbifera tuber (DBT), a medicinal herb belonging to the

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Dioscoreaceae family, has been widely used in China and exhibits a variety of

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pharmacological activities, including goiter inhibitory, anti-inflammatory, and

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antitumor effects (Tang, 1995; Rao et al., 2010; Liu et al., 2011; Wang et al., 2012).

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Despite a wide array of therapeutic values, the hepatotoxicity of DBT has been a

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critical safety issue restricting its application (Liu, 2002; Huang et al., 2013). Liver

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injury cases have frequently been found to be associated with the consumption of

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DBT in clinical practice (Yang et al., 2006; Lu and Wu, 2014). Studies have attributed

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the DBT-induced hepatotoxicity to different causes, including oxidative damage to

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hepatic mitochondria or bile acid (BA) metabolic disorders (Wang et al., 2010; Wang

50

et al., 2011; Zhao et al., 2017; Xiong et al., 2017).

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A number of diterpenoid lactones (DLs) have been isolated and identified from

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DBT; the major DLs found in DBT were reportedly 8-epidiosbulbin E acetate (EEA)

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and diosbulbin B (DIOB) (Kawasaki et al., 1968; Murray et al., 1984; Gao et al.,

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2002). Our preliminary study revealed that DIOB and EEA played an important role

55

in the hepatotoxicity of DBT (Shi et al., 2018). However, compared with abundant

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investigations on DIOB, few studies have been associated with EEA. Lin et al.

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demonstrated that administration of EEA could cause severe acute hepatotoxicity in

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vivo and the observed liver injury required cytochromes P450-mediated metabolism

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(Lin et al., 2015). The electrophilic intermediate generated by metabolic activation of

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the furan ring is responsible for EEA-induced hepatotoxicity (Lin et al., 2016). 3

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Furthermore, the cysteine- and lysine-based protein adduction with the reactive

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intermediate was found both in vitro and in vivo, where the changes in levels of the

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protein adductions might be related to alternations in degrees of EEA-induced

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hepatotoxicity (Lin et al., 2016). Although these investigations facilitate a better

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understanding of the mechanism of hepatoxic action of EEA, a consensus is still far

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from being realized. Therefore, it is urgently necessary to reveal the underlying

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mechanism of EEA-induced hepatic damage.

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Generating high-throughput data from multiple technique platforms, systems

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biology is being increasingly applied for the search of novel biomarkers and a deeper

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understanding of the toxic effects of xenobiotics (Hua et al., 2015; Basu et al., 2017).

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Transcriptomics, which can identify sensitive and detailed insights into the potential

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mechanisms of toxic action at an earlier molecular level, provides a valuable platform

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in predicting possible toxicity and further revealing the potential biomarkers in

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toxicity (Cui et al., 2010; Li et al., 2014). Focusing on studying the multi-parametric

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metabolic responses in living systems after pathophysiological stimuli or genetic

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modification, metabonomics can also relate these responses to the gene expression

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profiles and pathology results (Chen et al., 2018; Fan et al., 2016). Moreover, the

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integration of transcriptomics and metabolomics profiles may offer a greater

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reliability in expounding metabolic alterations and allow further elucidation toward

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the toxic effects and mechanism (Lu et al., 2013). To the best of our knowledge, the

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integrated application of these two platforms to characterize EEA-induced hepatic

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toxicity has not yet been reported. 4

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EEA has a potential hepatotoxic effect on the physiological and biological

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functions of organisms via regulating multiple metabolic pathways to an abnormal

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state. In the present study, an integrated analysis of general toxicity studies,

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transcriptomics, and metabonomics approaches was applied to investigate

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EEA-induced hepatotoxicity in mice (Fig. 1). Moreover, the pathways related to the

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toxic effects of EEA were summarized by correlation network analysis and validated

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by quantitative real-time PCR (qRT-PCR) and Western blot analyses. The objectives

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of the present study were to provide a comprehensive insight into the mechanism and

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potential biomarkers of EEA-induced hepatotoxicity.

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2. Materials and methods

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2.1. Reagents

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The DBT was obtained from Yunnan province, China. The sample was

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authenticated by Prof. Hui-Jun Li and deposited at State Key Laboratory of Natural

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Medicines (China Pharmaceutical University, Nanjing, China).

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Chromatographic grade methanol was obtained from CNW Technologies Gmbh

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(Dussel-dorf, Germany). Chloroform and pyridine were provided by Adamas Reagent

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Co., Ltd. (Basel, Switzerland). L-2-Chlorophenylalanine (internal standard, IS) was

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purchased from Shanghai Heng Bo Biological Technology Co., Ltd. (Shanghai,

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China).

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trimethylchlorosilane (TMCS) was purchased from REGIS Technologies (Chicago,

N,O-bis

(trimethylsilyl)

trifluoroacetamide

5

(BSTFA)

with

1%

104

USA). Deionized water (18 MΩ cm) was prepared by distilled water through a

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Milli-Q system (Massachusetts, USA). Bile acid standards were purchased from

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Sigma-Aldrich Co. (St. Louis, MO, USA), including cholic acid (CA), lithocholic

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acid (LCA), deoxycholic acid (DCA), ursodeoxycholic acid (UDCA), hyodeoxycholic

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acid

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glycochenodeoxycholic acid (GCDCA), tauroursodeoxycholic acid (TUDCA),

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taurohyodeoxycholic acid (THDCA), taurocholic acid (TCA), taurolithocholic acid

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(TLCA), dehydrocholic acid (DHCA, IS). EEA was isolated from DBT in our

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laboratory and the chemical structure (Fig. S1) was confirmed by extensive

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spectroscopic analyses. The purity of EEA was > 98%, detected by ultra-high

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performance liquid chromatography (UPLC) using peak area normalization method.

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Other reagents and solvents were of analytical grade.

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2.2. Animals and treatment

(HDCA),

chenodeoxycholic

acid

(CDCA),

glycocholic

acid

(GCA),

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Male ICR mice (4–5 weeks old; weighing: 18–22 g) were purchased from

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Sino-British SIPPR/BK Lab Animal Ltd. (Shanghai, China). Mice were fed a standard

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laboratory diet and given free access to tap water. They were kept in a controlled

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room temperature (22 ± 2oC), humidity (60 ± 5%), and a 12 h dark/light cycle for at

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least 7 days before treatment. All animal studies were performed according to the

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Provision and General Recommendation of Chinese Experimental Animals

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Administration Legislation and were approved by Department of Science and

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Technology of Jiangsu Province (license number: SYXK (SU) 2016-0011).

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The mice were orally administered EEA (150 mg/kg, suspended in 0.5% 6

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CMC-Na, n = 10) for 36 h, and 0.5% sodium carboxymethyl cellulose (CMC-Na) was

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used as a vehicle control (n = 10). During the time they were fasted from food, but no

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water 12 h prior to the administration of the test suspension. Blood samples and liver

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tissues were collected at 36 h following treatment. All biological samples were

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lyophilized and stored at −80oC before further analysis.

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In a separate study, mice were given EEA at 30 mg/kg (i.g.), blood and liver were

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collected 36 h after the administration, and the serum alanine aminotransferase (ALT),

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aspartate aminotransferase (AST), total bilirubin (TBIL), direct bilirubin (DBIL) and

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alkaline phosphatase (ALP) levels were measured. Liver samples were collected and

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prepared for further western blots analysis.

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2.3. Detection of AST, ALT, TBIL, DBIL and ALP levels from serum

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Blood was collected from the eyeball and centrifuged at 1500g for 10 min at 4oC.

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Serum AST, ALT, TBIL, DBIL and ALP activities were measured on Cobas 8000

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modular analyzer (Basel, Switzerland).

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2.4. Histopathologic examination

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Liver tissues were fixed in 10% neutral buffered formalin, paraffin processed,

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and sectioned at 4 µm. For histological evaluation, the tissue sections were stained

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with hematoxylin and eosin (H&E) and examined for histopathological changes under

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the Olympus DX45 microscope (Tokyo, Japan).

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2.5. RNA isolation, cDNA library construction and illumina deep sequencing

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Six liver tissue samples from three biological replicates of the vehicle and 7

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EEA-treated mice groups were used for the transcriptomic analysis. Total RNA was

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extracted using Trizol reagent (Invitrogen, USA) according to the manufacturer’s

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protocol. The RNA integrity was assessed using a Bioanalyzer 2100 system (Agilent

150

Technologies, USA). The RNA samples for the transcriptome analysis were prepared

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using an Illumina kit, following the manufacturer’s recommendations. The fragments

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were purified via agarose gel electrophoresis and enriched by PCR amplification to

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create a cDNA library. Sequencing and data processing (including the statistical

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analysis and selection of differentially expressed genes) were all performed following

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the methods (Katz et al., 2010).

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2.6. Metabolic profiling analysis

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An aliquot of 100 µL of serum or 60 mg of liver tissue sample was placed in a 2

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mL eppendorf (EP) tube, followed by extraction with 0.48 mL of mixture of

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chloroform and methanol (Vmethanol : Vchloroform = 3:1). Afterwards, 20 µL of

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L-2-chlorophenylalanine (1 mg/mL stock in dH2O) were added as internal standard,

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and samples were vortex-mixed for 30 s. A ball mill was used to homogenize the

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samples for 4min at 45 Hz, followed by sonication for 5 min, and then centrifugation

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for 15 min at 28000g, 4oC. Quality control (QC) samples were prepared by pooling

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aliquots of all samples and were processed with the same procedure as that followed

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for the experiment samples. The extracts were dried in a vacuum concentrator at 30oC

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for approximately 1.5 h, and then 60 µL of methoxyamine hydrochloride in pyridine

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(20 mg/mL) was added to the residue, being derivatized at 80°C for 30 min.

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Subsequently, 80 µL of the BSTFA regent (1% TMCS, v/v) were added into the 8

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sample aliquots, incubated for 1.5 h at 70oC, and 10 µL FAMEs (Standard mixture of

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fatty acid methyl esters, C8-C16:1 mg/mL; C18-C24:0.5 mg/mL in chloroform) was

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added to the samples until cooling to the room temperature. The pooled QC sample

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was injected five times at the beginning of the run in order to ensure system

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equilibration and then every 10 samples to further monitor the stability of the analysis.

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2.7. GC-TOF MS analysis

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GC-TOF MS analysis was performed using an Agilent 7890 gas chromatograph

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system (Agilent Technologies Inc., Santa Clara, California, USA) coupled with a

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Pegasus HT time-of-flight mass spectrometer (LECO Corp., St. Joseph, MI, USA)

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that included an Rxi-5Sil MS column (Restek, Bellefonte, USA), which was 30 m in

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length and 0.25 mm in inner diameter with a film thickness of 0.25 µm. A 1 µL aliquot

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of the analyte was injected in splitless mode. The carrier gas was helium with a 3

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mL/min front inlet purge flow and a constant 1 mL/min gas flow rate through the

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column. The initial temperature was maintained at 50°C for 1 min, raised to 310°C at

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a rate of 10°C/min, and then kept for 5 min at 310°C. The injection, transfer line and

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ion source temperatures were 280, 270, and 220°C, respectively. The energy was -70

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eV in electron impact mode. The mass spectrometry data were acquired in full-scan

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mode with the m/z range of 50 − 500 at a rate of 20 spectra per second after a solvent

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delay of 370 s.

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LECO Chroma TOF4.3X software and LECO-Fiehn Rtx5 database (Leco Corp.,

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St. Joseph, MI, USA) were used for the raw data acquisition and processing, such as

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the raw peak exacting, raw peak exacting, data baseline filtering and calibration, peak 9

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alignment, deconvolution analysis, peak identification, and peak area integration. The

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retention time index method was used for peak identification, with a tolerance value

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of 5000.

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Principal

component

analysis

(PCA)

and

orthogonal

partial

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least-squares-discriminate analysis (OPLS-DA) were performed using SIMCA

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version

197

(http://www.metaboanalyst.ca/). Statistical analyses were conducted by SPSS

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software version 19.0 (IBM Corp., Armonk, USA). On the basis of variable

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importance in the projection (VIP) scores > 1.0 obtained from the OPLS-DA model

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and p values < 0.05 evaluated by the student’s t-test, a set of discriminating

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metabolites were determined (Afanador et al., 2013; Matthews et al., 1985). Heat

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maps and hierarchical cluster analyses were conducted using MeV 4.6.0 software. The

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pathway mapping of the serum was analyzed with MetScape 3 (Karnovsky et al.,

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2011).

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2.8. Integrated pathway analysis

14.0.1

(Umetrics,

Sweden)

and

MetaboAnalyst

4.0

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To identify the related pathways among the metabolites and genes,

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MetaboAnalyst 4.0 (http://www.metaboanalyst.ca/) was utilized to further holistic

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pathway analysis. Hypergeometric tests were calculated to evaluate the enrichment

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analysis between metabolome and transcriptome data, and the topology analysis

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(Degree Centrality) were applied to evaluate whether a given gene or metabolite plays

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an important role in a biological response based on its position in the pathway (Chong

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et al., 2018). 10

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2.9. Real-time RT-PCR

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To examine the accuracy and reproducibility of the Illumina RNA-Seq results,

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qRT-PCR assays were performed with gene-specific primers (Suo et al., 2018). Total

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RNA was extracted from EEA-treated mice using the TRIzol reagent (Invirtrogen,

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USA) and qRT-PCR was performed using SYBR Premix Ex Taq II (TaKaRa, Japan)

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following the manufacturer’s protocol. qRT-PCR was conducted on Applied

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Biosystems 7,300 machine (Carlsbad, USA) as follows: 3 min at 95°C for

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denaturation, followed by 40 cycles of 7 s at 95°C for denaturation, 10 s at 57°C for

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annealing, and 30 s at 72°C for extension. For each target gene, triplicate reactions

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were performed. Relative gene expression levels were calculated from cycle threshold

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values using the 2−∆∆Ct method (Livak and Schmittgen, 2001). The sequences of

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specific primers used for qRT-PCR are listed in Table 1.

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2.10. Western blotting assay

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Western blot analysis was performed as previously described with minor

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modifications (Renaud et al., 2011). Liver homogenates were prepared in radio

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immunoprecipitation assay (RIPA) buffer. Protein concentrations were determined

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using bicinchonininc acid (BCA) assay method according to the manufacturer's

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instructions (Beyotime, China). Samples were subjected to polyacrylamide gel

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electrophoresis, transferred onto a polyvinylidene difluoride membrane, and probed

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with the respective primary and secondary antibodies. Membranes were stripped and

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reprobed with a β-actin antibody as the loading control. Proteins were detected using

11

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chemiluminescence.

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2.11. UPLC-QqQ-MS profiling and MS conditions for BAs analysis

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Metabolomic profiling analysis of BAs was performed by following our

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previously published method (Zhao et al., 2017). Liver samples (60 mg) were mixed

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with 400 µL of methanol containing 10 µL IS. The mixture was vortexed for 5 min,

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followed by centrifugation at 28000g for 10 min at 4°C, and the supernatant was

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analyzed by UPLC-QqQ/MS.

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3. Results

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3.1. Hepatotoxicity of EEA in mice

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Histopathologic analysis (n = 5 per group) showed inflammatory cell infiltration,

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hepatic cell necrosis and focal necrosis (Fig. 2A, B) in mice liver i.g. administered

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EEA at 150 mg/kg. Additionally, the serum ALT/AST/TBIL/DBIL levels significantly

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increased (p <0.01), compared with 30.1 ± 4.4 U/L (ALT), 105.0 ± 27.3 U/L (AST),

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1.1 ± 0.2 U/L (TBIL) and 0.9 ± 0.2 U/L (DBIL) in mice treated with vehicle (Fig.

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2C-F). Additionally, the serum ALP levels were also significantly increased (p <0.05)

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(Fig. 2G). Compared with mice treated with EEA (150 mg/kg), no changes were

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observed in the levels of ALT/AST/TBIL/DBIL/ALP in mice administered EEA (30

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mg/kg) (Fig. 2C-G). These findings indicated that EEA administered to the mice at

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the dose of 150 mg/kg caused potential hepatotoxicity.

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3.2. Differentially expressed genes (DEGs) identification and selection

12

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In order to identify hepatotoxicity-related candidate genes that responded to EEA

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(150 mg/kg) infection, four transcriptome profiles were performed. First, the

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expression level of each gene was normalized using the fragments per kilobase of

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transcript per million mapped reads (FPKM) (Trapnell et al., 2010). The genes with

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data false discovery rate (FDR) < 0.001 and estimated absolute log2fold change

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(log2FC) ≥ 1 in sequence counts across libraries were then considered as significant

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DEGs. Finally, a total of 7131 DEGs were identified between EEA-treated groups and

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the control groups. Of these genes, 3749 genes were up-regulated and 3382 genes

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were down-regulated in the liver of mice given EEA at 150 mg/kg.

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3.3. Gene annotation and the functional classification of DEGs

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To gain additional insights into the function of DEGs, GO and KEGG databases

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were used to annotate and classify DEG functions. DEGs overrepresented in the two

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groups using GO analysis (Fig. S3) suggested that the cofactor metabolic process was

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the most significantly enriched biological function.

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The KEGG database was used to further understand the biological functions and

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pathways of DEGs. Based on the KEGG pathways enrichment analysis, metabolic

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pathways were found to be one of the most over-represented processes in mice

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exposed to EEA treatment (150 mg/kg), suggesting that enzymatic reaction and

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enzymes might play key roles in the development of EEA-induced liver injury. The

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list of over-represented KEGG pathways in mice exposed to EEA (150 mg/kg) is

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presented in Table S1.

13

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3.4. Metabolic profiling analysis of serum and livers

276

The stability and repeatability of the GC-TOF MS system for large-scale sample

277

analysis were confirmed by the analysis of pooled QC samples and the retention time

278

of the internal standard. The serum and liver metabolic profiling analysis was

279

performed according to the proposed approach (Dunn et al., 2011). Typical total ion

280

chromatograms (TICs) of serum and livers samples from the control and EEA (150

281

mg/kg) groups are presented in Fig. S4 (A: serum; B: livers). A total of 562 and 722

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metabolite peaks in serum and livers were respectively extracted through GC-TOF

283

MS (Fig. S5). To obtain a comprehensive view of the metabonome, PCA was

284

performed to visualize the trends and outliers in the data for the control and EEA (150

285

mg/kg) groups. The RSDs of the retention time of L-2-chlorophenylalanine (IS) in

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serum and livers were 0.0048% and 0.0132%, respectively. The PCA also showed a

287

tight grouping of the QC samples (Fig. 3A and Fig. 4A). These data demonstrate a

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high reproducibility of the method. The score plots revealed that there were no

289

outliers and that the two groups were clearly separated (Fig. 3 and Fig. 4).

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To study the changes in metabolites in mice after EEA (150 mg/kg)

291

administration, the liver and serum samples were analyzed by OPLS-DA to identify

292

the variables responsible for the differences among groups (Bylesjö et al., 2010; Chan

293

et al., 2009). In the OPLS-DA score plots (Fig. 3B and Fig. 4B), the EEA groups

294

exhibited a tendency to deviate from the control groups, revealing a visible

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perturbation of the metabolic profiles in EEA-150 mg/kg treated groups. The models

296

were validated by the permutation test. The R2 values of serum and liver samples in 14

297

the OPLS-DA models were 0.879 and 0.755 (Fig. 3C and Fig. 4C), respectively,

298

indicating an excellent prediction.

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To identify the variables responsible for this large separation, the importance of

300

the VIP statistics from OPLS-DA modelling and t-tests (P< 0.05) between the two

301

groups was used to pre-select variables. The GC-TOF MS spectra of the metabolites

302

were analyzed based on mass spectra libraries, and the metabolites had to meet the

303

conditions VIP > 1 and P < 0.05. In the EEA-treated groups (150 mg/kg), a total of 43

304

and 42 metabolites were, respectively, identified in the serum and liver samples (Table

305

S2). Additionally, heat maps were created based on the average fold change of each

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metabolite to intuitively evaluate the variation tendency of the metabolite

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concentrations between the control and EEA (150 mg/kg)-treated groups. As shown in

308

Fig.5, 6 metabolites had decreased in the serum and 7 metabolites had increased in the

309

livers. Compared with the control group, one metabolite (3-hydroxybutyric acid) was

310

decreased, while six metabolites (2-hydroxybutanoic acid, uracil, N-methyl-dl-alanine,

311

fumaric acid, L-malic acid and citric acid) had an opposite tendency in both serum

312

and livers. Subsequently, the metabolic pathways analysis was performed based on

313

the metabolites in serum and livers. As a web-based server supporting pathway

314

analysis, MetaboAnalyst 4.0 (www.metaboanalyst.ca) integrates enrichment analysis

315

and pathway topology analysis to discover the significant and relevant pathways

316

affected by EEA administration. Three metabolic pathways (valine, leucine and

317

isoleucine biosynthesis phenylalanine, tyrosine and tryptophan biosynthesis and

318

D-Glutamine and D-glutamate metabolism) participated in the most relevant 15

319

pathways affected by EEA, with an impact value of 1.0 in serum (Fig. 6A). Figure 6B

320

demonstrates that elevated phenylalanine, tyrosine and tryptophan biosynthesis was

321

filtered out as significant metabolic pathways marking the impact of EEA in livers.

322

Moreover, compared with the control group, several other important pathways,

323

including citrate cycle (TCA cycle), phenylalanine metabolism, β-alanine metabolism

324

and taurine and hypotaurine metabolism, were activated in both serum and livers. In

325

the present study, our results illustrated that the pathways of EEA-induced

326

hepatotoxicity were related to purine metabolism, glutathione metabolism, as well as

327

primary bile acid biosynthesis in serum or livers of mice treated with EEA at 150

328

mg/kg.

329

3.5. Key pathways related to EEA-induced hepatotoxicity

330

MetaboAnalyst 4.0 was used to visualize and interpret the metabolomic and gene

331

expression profiling data in livers (Chong et al., 2010), allowing us to build and

332

analyze networks of genes and compounds, identify enriched pathways from the

333

differential expression profiling data, and visualize changes in metabolite data.

334

Results indicate that 79 signaling pathways played important roles in EEA-induced

335

liver injury, and the most important 20 pathways in mice exposed to EEA (150 mg/kg)

336

are shown in Fig.7. Amino acid metabolism (valine, leucine and isoleucine

337

degradation, arginine and proline metabolism, tryptophan metabolism, D-glutamine

338

and D-glutamate metabolism, glutathione metabolism and taurine and hypotaurine

339

metabolism), fatty acid metabolism (fatty acid metabolism, primary bile acid

340

biosynthesis and arachidonic acid metabolism), carbohydrate metabolism (TCA cycle, 16

341

propanoate metabolism, pentose and glucuronate interconversions, ascorbate and

342

aldarate metabolism, galactose metabolism and glyoxylate and dicarboxylate

343

metabolism)

344

metabolism-cytochrome P450, metabolism of xenobiotics by cytochrome P450 and

345

drug metabolism-other enzymes) were found to play important roles in EEA-induced

346

hepatotoxicity. Other pathways were involved in metabolism of cofactors, vitamins

347

and nucleotide metabolism, including “retinol metabolism,” “purine metabolism,” and

348

“pyrimidine metabolism.”

349

3.6. Validation of RNA-Seq data by qRT-PCR

and

xenobiotics

biodegradation

and

metabolism

(drug

350

To validate the RNA-Seq data, 10 differentially expressed genes were chosen for

351

a gene expression analysis via qRT-PCR (Fig.S6). In total, these 10 genes exhibited

352

consistent expression patterns between the RNA-Seq data and qRT-PCR. As

353

mentioned above, both data sets strongly correlated in the present study.

354

3.7. Regulation of FN1, UGT1a1, CYP1B1, CYP1A1, CYP2E1, CYP8B1, CYP7A1,

355

BAAT, NTCP, BSEP and MRP3 protein expression in the livers of mice treated with

356

EEA

357

The integrated analysis of the results from transcriptome and metabolome

358

profiles indicated that down-regulation of key enzymes and disorder of BA

359

metabolism in the liver played a pivotal role in the hepatotoxicity of EEA. The results

360

showed downregulation of CYP7A1 and CYP8B1 protein expression in livers from

361

EEA(150 mg/kg)-treated mice compared to vehicle groups. In addition, three 17

362

important BA transporters - NTCP, MRP3, and BSEP protein expression - were also

363

measured with a significant down-regulation of NTCP, MRP3, and BSEP protein

364

expression observed between the control and treatment groups (150 mg/kg).

365

Additionally, CYP1A1 was found to be significantly up-regulated in EEA-treated

366

mice livers. Western blot results are shown in Fig.8A.

367

As shown in Fig. 8B, no significant changes were observed in the levels of

368

CYP7A1, CYP1A1, NTCP and BSEP protein expression in EEA (30 mg/kg) groups,

369

which were in accordance with the results of biochemical indices serum

370

determination.

371

3.8. Quantitative analysis of BAs

372

By combining metabolomics and transcriptomics data, studying the alternation in

373

the BA metabolism pathway after EEA (150 mg/kg) treatment has become an

374

interesting topic. Therefore, concentrations of 12 individual bile acids - including 6

375

free bile acids, 2 glycine-conjugated bile acids, and 4 taurine-conjugated bile acids -

376

were simultaneously quantified in the liver of the control and EEA treated groups

377

(150 mg/kg) using our published method (Zhao et al., 2017). As shown in Fig. 9,

378

compared with the control group, the concentrations of 2 bile acids were significantly

379

increased, and one (CDCA) significantly decreased in mice liver. Among these bile

380

acids, bile acids such as TCA, CA and GCA exhibited the highest increases of 6.4-,

381

3.8-, and 5.7-fold, respectively. Most importantly, the taurine conjugated bile acid

382

TCA and free bile acid CA were both significantly elevated in the EEA-treated groups

383

(p < 0.01), indicating that, along with CDCA, bile acids including TCA and CA could 18

384

be considered as biomarkers of EEA induced liver injury.

385

4. Discussion

386

The EEA-associated hepatotoxicity has been well recognized in experimental

387

animals (Lin et al., 2015). However, its underlying mechanism of toxicity remains

388

largely unexplored to date. In this work, we utilized the integrated transcriptomics and

389

metabolomics approaches to identify the alterations of genes and metabolic profiles in

390

the livers of mice with EEA-induced liver injury. Mice developed hepatotoxicity

391

following 36 h administration of 150 mg/kg of EEA, which could be ascribed to the

392

down-regulation of key enzymes and disorder of BA metabolism in the liver.

393

Serum levels of ALT, AST and bilirubin are most commonly used in current

394

clinical practice, especially for acute hepatocellular injury (Whitfield et al., 1985;

395

Van-swelm et al., 2014). The hepatotoxicity induced by a single dose of EEA at 100

396

mg/kg reached a maximum at 36 h post treatment, with inflammatory cell infiltration

397

being observed (Lin et al., 2015). Correlating well with this evidence, our data

398

showed that the levels of ALT and AST were observed with the elevation in serum

399

and confirmed by inflammatory cell infiltration and focal necrosis in the liver of mice

400

given EEA at 150 mg/kg. Remarkably, we found that TBIL and DBIL levels were also

401

sensitive biomarkers, signifying the mechanism of EEA-induced liver injury. More

402

importantly, the serum biochemical parameters showed significant elevation in the

403

levels of ALP, indicating that the administration of EEA might influence the BAs

404

metabolism of the liver (Qu et al., 2017, Fuchs et al., 2017).

19

405

The liver is a multifunctional organ that is involved in various enzymatic

406

metabolic activities. Therefore, damage to this important organ by a hepatotoxic agent

407

will lead to a disturbance in the body metabolism (Ramadori et al., 2015; McEuen et

408

al., 2017). At 36 h after EEA (150 mg/kg) treatment, the expression of 625 genes

409

involved in the metabolic pathways was found to be significantly regulated. In

410

addition, drug metabolism cytochrome P450 and retinol metabolism also showed

411

significant change. Cytochrome P450 3A4 had been demonstrated to play critical

412

roles in EEA transformation to the corresponding cis-enedial intermediate, which

413

triggered the EEA-involved hepatotoxicity (Lin et al., 2016). The integrated analysis

414

results showed that the pathway “Drug metabolism – cytochrome P450” and

415

“Metabolism of xenobiotics by cytochrome P450” (Fig. 7) were found to be the

416

significant changed pathway in the model. Additionally, Fig. 6a shows glutathione

417

metabolism is significant but coverage level is not high, which may result from the

418

narrow detecting range provided by GC-MS method. This indicated that the metabolic

419

activation mediated by cytochromes P450 might be the triggering factors leading to

420

the development of EEA-induced liver injury.

421

Previous study showed that the DBT-induced hepatotoxicity had pronounced

422

impacts on the metabolism of amino acids (Zhao et al., 2017). Similarly, the results

423

from transcriptomics and metabonomics analyses (L-alanine, L-isoleucine, L-proline,

424

L-phenylalanine, and L-tyrosine) in our study supported this view that the metabolism

425

of amino acids played an important role in EEA-induced liver injury. Specifically, the

426

most notable changes were observed in taurine and hypotaurine metabolism. It should 20

427

be noticed that, compared with the control group, taurine was altered in the liver and

428

serum in response to EEA, while its content was increased in the serum and decreased

429

in the liver. Many studies have demonstrated that taurine was maintained in

430

abundance in the liver by both endogenous biosynthesis and exogenous transport,

431

though it decreased in liver diseases (Penttila et al., 1990; Matsuzaki et al., 1993;

432

Miyazaki and Matsuzaki, 2014). In addition, the most established role of taurine was

433

its conjugation with bile acids for excretion into bile (Danielsson, 1990). Therefore,

434

EEA-induced liver injuries might be strongly related to the reduction of taurine and

435

the disorder of BAs in the liver. The TCA cycle was an important hub of the

436

metabolism of carbohydrates, fats, and proteins, while L-malic acid, citric acid and

437

oxaloacetic acid were the dominant products of the TCA cycle (Vuoristo et al., 2016;

438

Zhang et al., 2016). As shown in Fig.5, L-malic acid and citric acid levels were

439

upgraded in EEA-treated groups, implying that there exists an imbalance with the

440

TCA cycle. Through further analysis, it was determined that TCA cycle functioned as

441

a bridge among the other disturbed metabolic pathways. Purine and pyrimidine

442

metabolisms might be the novel metabolic pathways for EEA-induced hepatotoxicity,

443

which was in agreement with our earlier work (Zhao et al., 2017). Taken in

444

combination, these results indicate that the EEA-induced liver injury might be

445

attributable in part ascribed to the imbalance of energy metabolism and metabolism of

446

amino acids.

447

Bile acid metabolism is referred to synthesis, transport and excretion (Halilbasic

448

et al., 2013). On one hand, the classical biosynthetic pathway (known as the neutral 21

449

BA biosynthetic pathway) is the primary pathway of BA biosynthesis. The present

450

RNA-Seq analysis showed that the expression of CYP7A1 (involved in BAs synthesis

451

from cholesterol) was significantly decreased, resulting in the reduction of BAs

452

biosynthesis (Russell, 2003). On the other hand, down-regulation was observed in the

453

expression of several important BAs transporters that joined in the hepatocellular

454

uptake: Na/taurocholate co-transporting polypeptide (NTCP/SLC10A1) and excretion

455

of BAs: bile salt export pump (BSEP), and the multidrug resistance protein 3 (MRP3)

456

(Soroka et al., 2014; Lam et al., 2010; Hirohashi et al., 2000). In general, we believed

457

that the metabolic balance of BAs was disturbed, thereby resulting in liver injury.

458

Thus, together with the protein analysis by western blotting analysis (Fig.8), these

459

results suggested that the imbalance of BAs metabolism might be responsible for

460

EEA-induced liver injury.

461

In summary, the integrative analysis of the gene expression and metabolites

462

levels changes following EEA exposure provide valuable information concerning the

463

hepatotoxic mechanism of action in different biological samples. In the process of 36

464

h administration of EEA (150 mg/kg), we found that the metabolic activation

465

mediated by cytochromes P450 might be the crucial steps in EEA-induced

466

hepatotoxicity, and the imbalance of energy metabolism, the metabolism of amino

467

acids and purine and pyrimidine metabolisms might also lead to the EEA-triggered

468

hepatic damage. This study suggested that the balance of BAs synthesis, uptake and

469

excretion was disturbed, the integrated effect on BAs metabolism resulting in liver

470

injury, and BAs including TCA and CA along with CDCA could be considered as 22

471

biomarkers of EEA-induced liver injury. The present findings will provide useful

472

information for further studies to examining the mechanism of EEA-induced

473

hepatotoxicity.

474

Acknowledgments

475

This work was supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China

476

(No. 81773993) and the Project Funded by the Priority Academic Program

477

Development (PAPD) of Jiangsu Higher Education Institutions.

478

479

Conflicts of interest

480

The authors declare no conflicts of interest.

481

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647

31

648

Figure captions

649

Fig. 1 Summary figure representing the experimental design, methods and tools

650

applied to investigate EEA-induced hepatotoxicity in mice using the integrated

651

transcriptomic and metabolomics method. EEA: 8-epidiosbulbin E acetate.

652 653

Fig. 2 Typical liver histopathology (A: control group; B: EEA-treated group) and

654

biochemical parameters (C-G, ALT/AST/TBIL/DBIL/ALP activities) in mice 36 h

655

following i.g. administration of EEA at 0, 30, or 150 mg/kg. Results of quantitative

656

analysis values are expressed as mean ± SD (n = 6). Significant differences from the

657

value of control group with the administration of EEA were noted (*p < 0.05, **p <

658

0.01).

659 660

Fig. 3 GC-TOF MS profiles of serum samples in EEA (150 mg/kg) and control

661

groups. Principal component analysis (PCA) model (A) and the pattern recognition of

662

orthogonal partial least-squares-discriminate analysis (OPLS-DA) model (B/C). The

663

green circle represents control group, the blue circle represents EEA-treated group,

664

the red circle represents quality control(QC) group, respectively.

665 666

Fig. 4 GC-TOF MS profiles of liver tissue samples in EEA (150 mg/kg) and control

667

groups. PCA model (A) and the pattern recognition of OPLS-DA model (B/C).

668 669

Fig. 5 Heat map visualization of differentially abundant metabolites in serum (A) and 32

670

liver tissue (B) samples of EEA (150 mg/kg)-administered and control groups, Colors

671

from highest (red) to lowest (blue) represent metabolite expression values in different

672

groups.

673 674

Fig. 6 Analysis of metabolic disorders in serum (A) and liver tissue (B) in EEA (150

675

mg/kg)-treated groups and control groups using MetaboAnalyst 4.0. Bubble size and

676

color show the significance of path arrangement. The lighter and smaller bubbles

677

represent least affected pathways, whereas the larger and darker bubbles represent the

678

more markedly affected pathways.

679 680

Fig. 7 A summary of the result from the integrated pathway analysis module of

681

transcriptome and metabolome in EEA (150 mg/kg)-treated mice. The stacked bars

682

show the accumulated contributions from enrichment and topology analysis.

683 684

Fig. 8 Western verification results of differentially expressed genes (FN1, UGT1A1,

685

CYP1B1, CYP1A1, CYP2E1, CYP8B1, CYP7A1, BAAT, NTCP, BSEP and MRP3)

686

in the livers of mice treated with EEA at 30, or 150 mg/kg. β-actin level was used as

687

the internal reference. Vehicle: control group, EEA-30: EEA (30 mg/kg)-treated group,

688

EEA-150: EEA (150 mg/kg)-treated group.

689 690

Fig. 9 Alterations of the BAs concentrations in response to EEA (150 mg/kg)

691

consumption. The data are expressed as the mean ± SD (n = 6). Significant 33

692

differences from the value of control group with the administration of EEA were

693

indicated (*p < 0.05, **p < 0.01). Vehicle: control group, EEA-150: EEA (150

694

mg/kg)-treated group.

695

34

696

Table 1 The quantitative PCR primers of candidate genes. Number

Gene name

1

CYP7A1

2

BAAT

3

FH1

4

ABCC2

5

SlCO1A4

6

CYP2E1

7

ADA

8

IDH2

9

UGT1A1

10

CYP3A25

Primer sequence S: TTCATCACAAACTCCCTGTCATAC A: TTCCATCACTTGGGTCTATGCT S: ATGAATAGCCCCTACCAAATCC A: TCCACCAGCACCTCCAAACA S: AGATTGGAGGTGCTACGGAACG A: TCCAGTCTGCCAAACCACCA S: CATTGGCTTCGTGAAAGACCCT A: AATCGTGTACTGCCTCCTAGCC S: GGGTTGCCTGCTGCTCTAAGA A: TTCCGTTCTCCATCATTCTGCA S: AGGCTGTCAAGGAGGTGCTAC A: GCACAGCCAATCAGAAAGGTAG S: CAGACACCCGCATTCAACAA A: TGTCCATGCCGATAATGTTGC S: ACAGTCACCCGCCATTACCG A: TCCAGCGTCTGTGCAAACCT S: ACGCTGGGAGGCTGTTAGT A: CCGTCCAAGTTCCACCAAAG S: GGAGGCCTGAACTGCTAAAG A: GTAGTTGAAAATGGTGCCAAGTAAC

697

35

Highlights: An integrated transcriptomic/metabolomics method for screening EEA hepatotoxicity Purine and pyrimidine metabolisms might be the novel metabolic pathways for EEA-induced hepatotoxicity Imbalance of bile acid metabolism might be responsible for EEA-induced hepatotoxicity TCA and CA along with CDCA could be considered as biomarkers

Declaration of interests ☐ The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper. ☐The authors declare the following financial interests/personal relationships which may be considered as potential competing interests:

The authors declare that there is no conflict of interests regarding the publication of this article.