A State-of-the-Science Review on High-Resolution Metabolomics Application in Air Pollution Health Research: Current Progress, Analytical Challenges, and Recommendations for Future Direction

Donghai Liang*, Zhenjiang Li, Jelle Vlaanderen, Ziyin Tang, Dean P Jones, Roel Vermeulen, Jeremy A Sarnat

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalReview articlepeer-review

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Understanding the mechanistic basis of air pollution toxicity is dependent on accurately characterizing both exposure and biological responses. Untargeted metabolomics, an analysis of small-molecule metabolic phenotypes, may offer improved estimation of exposures and corresponding health responses to complex environmental mixtures such as air pollution. The field remains nascent, however, with questions concerning the coherence and generalizability of findings across studies, study designs and analytical platforms. OBJECTIVES: We aimed to review the state of air pollution research from studies using untargeted high-resolution metabolomics (HRM), highlight the areas of concordance and dissimilarity in methodological approaches and reported findings, and discuss a path forward for future use of this analytical platform in air pollution research. METHODS: We conducted a state-of-the-science review to a) summarize recent research of air pollution studies using untargeted metabolomics and b) identify gaps in the peer-reviewed literature and opportunities for addressing these gaps in future designs. We screened articles published within Pubmed and Web of Science between 1 January 2005 and 31 March 2022. Two reviewers independently screened 2,065 abstracts, with discrepancies resolved by a third reviewer. RESULTS: We identified 47 articles that applied untargeted metabolomics on serum, plasma, whole blood, urine, saliva, or other biospecimens to investigate the impact of air pollution exposures on the human metabolome. Eight hundred sixteen unique features confirmed with level-1 or-2 evidence were reported to be associated with at least one or more air pollutants. Hypoxanthine, histidine, serine, aspartate, and glutamate were among the 35 metabolites consistently exhibiting associations with multiple air pollutants in at least 5 independent studies. Oxidative stress and inflammation-related pathways—including glycerophospholipid metabolism, pyrimidine metabolism, methionine and cysteine metabolism, tyrosine metabolism, and tryptophan metabolism—were the most commonly perturbed pathways reported in >70% of studies. More than 80% of the reported features were not chemically annotated, limiting the interpretability and generalizability of the findings. CONCLUSIONS: Numerous investigations have demonstrated the feasibility of using untargeted metabolomics as a platform linking exposure to internal dose and biological response. Our review of the 47 existing untargeted HRM–air pollution studies points to an underlying coherence and consistency across a range of sample analytical quantitation methods, extraction algorithms, and statistical modeling approaches. Future directions should focus on validation of these findings via hypothesis-driven protocols and technical advances in metabolic annotation and quantification. https://doi.org/10.1289/EHP11851.

Original languageEnglish
Article number056002
Number of pages25
JournalEnvironmental Health Perspectives
Volume131
Issue number5
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 May 2023

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2023, Public Health Services, US Dept of Health and Human Services. All rights reserved.

Funding

Support for this project was provided by the National Institutes of Health (NIH) research grant (R21ES032117, to D.L.) . We also acknowledge the tremendous support from the HERCULES Exposome Research Center, supported by the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences of the NIH (P30ES019776, to D.L., D.J., and J.S.) . R.V. and J.V. received funding from EXPOSOME-NL (the Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research; project 024.004.017, to R.V. and J.V.) and EXPANSE (EU-H2020 grant 874627, to R.V. and J.V.) .

FundersFunder number
EXPANSE874627, EU-H2020
EXPOSOMENL
National Institutes of HealthR21ES032117
National Institute of Environmental Health SciencesP30ES019776
Nederlandse Organisatie voor Wetenschappelijk Onderzoek024.004.017

    Keywords

    • Humans
    • Air Pollution/analysis
    • Air Pollutants/analysis
    • Metabolomics
    • Metabolome
    • Vehicle Emissions/analysis
    • Impact
    • Environmental metabolomics
    • Platform
    • Exposure
    • Exposome
    • Hormones
    • Asthma
    • Metabolites
    • Pollutants
    • Untargeted metabolomics

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