Back to Search Start Over

A metabolome atlas of the aging mouse brain

Authors :
Xinchen Lu
Jun Ding
Ying Zhang
Lynette Bower
Oliver Fiehn
Sili Fan
Jian Ji
Christopher R. Brydges
Tong Shen
Megan R. Showalter
Renee S. Araiza
Kevin C K Lloyd
Jacob Folz
Zachary Rabow
Sajjan S. Mehta
Source :
Nature communications, vol 12, iss 1, Nature Communications, Nature Communications, Vol 12, Iss 1, Pp 1-12 (2021)
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
eScholarship, University of California, 2021.

Abstract

The mammalian brain relies on neurochemistry to fulfill its functions. Yet, the complexity of the brain metabolome and its changes during diseases or aging remain poorly understood. Here, we generate a metabolome atlas of the aging wildtype mouse brain from 10 anatomical regions spanning from adolescence to old age. We combine data from three assays and structurally annotate 1,547 metabolites. Almost all metabolites significantly differ between brain regions or age groups, but not by sex. A shift in sphingolipid patterns during aging related to myelin remodeling is accompanied by large changes in other metabolic pathways. Functionally related brain regions (brain stem, cerebrum and cerebellum) are also metabolically similar. In cerebrum, metabolic correlations markedly weaken between adolescence and adulthood, whereas at old age, cross-region correlation patterns reflect decreased brain segregation. We show that metabolic changes can be mapped to existing gene and protein brain atlases. The brain metabolome atlas is publicly available (https://mouse.atlas.metabolomics.us/) and serves as a foundation dataset for future metabolomic studies.<br />Metabolites play an important role in physiology, yet the complexity of the metabolome and its interaction with disease and aging is poorly understood. Here the authors present a comprehensive atlas of the mouse brain metabolome and how it changes during aging.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature communications, vol 12, iss 1, Nature Communications, Nature Communications, Vol 12, Iss 1, Pp 1-12 (2021)
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....bc736ba1469cc0fc81d231c8cdd1d034