Objectives: Metabolites are the intermediate and final products of biological processes and ultimately reflect the responses of these processes to genetic regulation and environmental perturbations, including those involved in attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD).
Methods: We identified a quantitative profile of plasma metabolites in 58 ADHD patients (mean age 9.0 years, 77.6% males) and 38 healthy control subjects (mean age 10.2 years, 55.3% males) using the high-performance chemical isotope labelling (CIL)-based liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry (LC-MS). Using a volcano plot and orthogonal projections to latent structure-discriminant analysis (OPLS-DA), we determined nine metabolites with differentially expressed levels in ADHD plasma samples.
Results: Compared to the control group, the plasma levels of guanosine, O-phosphoethanolamine, phenyl-leucine, hypoxanthine, 4-aminohippuric acid, 5-hydroxylysine, and L-cystine appeared increased in the ADHD patients, whilegentisic acid and tryptophyl-phenylalanine were down-regulated in the patients with ADHD. We found that the plasma levels of all nine metabolites were able to discriminate the ADHD group from the control group. Levels of O-phosphoethanolamine, 4-aminohippuric acid, 5-hydroxylysine, L-cystine, tryptophyl-phenylalanine, and gentisic acid were significantly correlated with clinical ADHD symptoms.
Conclusions: This study is the first to use the CIL-based LC-MS to profile ADHD plasma metabolites, and we identified nine novel metabolite biomarkers of ADHD.
Keywords: ADHD; LC-MS; biomarkers; chemical isotope labelling; metabolomics.