Summary of Study ST001853
This data is available at the NIH Common Fund's National Metabolomics Data Repository (NMDR) website, the Metabolomics Workbench, https://www.metabolomicsworkbench.org, where it has been assigned Project ID PR001166. The data can be accessed directly via it's Project DOI: 10.21228/M80981 This work is supported by NIH grant, U2C- DK119886.
See: https://www.metabolomicsworkbench.org/about/howtocite.php
This study contains a large results data set and is not available in the mwTab file. It is only available for download via FTP as data file(s) here.
Study ID | ST001853 |
Study Title | Longitudinal Metabolomics of Human Plasma Reveals Robust Prognostic Markers of COVID-19 Disease Severity (Part 2) |
Study Summary | There is an urgent need to identify which COVID-19 patients will develop life-threatening illness so that medical resources can be optimally allocated and rapid treatment can be administered early in the disease course, when clinical management is most effective. To aid in the prognostic classification of disease severity, we perform untargeted metabolomics on plasma from 339 patients, with samples collected at six longitudinal time points. Using the temporal metabolic profiles and machine learning, we build a predictive model of disease severity. We discover that a panel of metabolites measured at the time of study entry successfully determine disease severity. Through analysis of longitudinal samples, we confirm that the majority of these markers are directly related to disease progression and that their levels are restored to baseline upon disease recovery. Finally, we validate that these metabolites are also altered in a hamster model of COVID-19. Our results indicate that metabolic changes associated with COVID-19 severity can be effectively used to stratify patients and inform resource allocation during the pandemic. |
Institute | Washington University in St. Louis |
Department | Chemistry |
Laboratory | Patti |
Last Name | Patti |
First Name | Gary |
Address | McMillen Chemistry Laboratory, Washington University 1 Brookings Dr @ Throop Drive, Rm 102, St. Louis, MO 63130-4899 |
gjpattij@wustl.edu | |
Phone | 314-935-3512 |
Submit Date | 2021-01-28 |
Num Groups | 3 |
Total Subjects | 56 |
Num Females | 56 |
Raw Data Available | Yes |
Raw Data File Type(s) | mzML |
Analysis Type Detail | LC-MS |
Release Date | 2021-06-30 |
Release Version | 1 |
Select appropriate tab below to view additional metadata details:
Project:
Project ID: | PR001166 |
Project DOI: | doi: 10.21228/M80981 |
Project Title: | Longitudinal Metabolomics of Human Plasma Reveals Robust Prognostic Markers of COVID-19 Disease Severity |
Project Summary: | There is an urgent need to identify which COVID-19 patients will develop life-threatening illness so that medical resources can be optimally allocated and rapid treatment can be administered early in the disease course, when clinical management is most effective. To aid in the prognostic classification of disease severity, we perform untargeted metabolomics on plasma from 339 patients, with samples collected at six longitudinal time points. Using the temporal metabolic profiles and machine learning, we build a predictive model of disease severity. We discover that a panel of metabolites measured at the time of study entry successfully determine disease severity. Through analysis of longitudinal samples, we confirm that the majority of these markers are directly related to disease progression and that their levels are restored to baseline upon disease recovery. Finally, we validate that these metabolites are also altered in a hamster model of COVID-19. Our results indicate that metabolic changes associated with COVID-19 severity can be effectively used to stratify patients and inform resource allocation during the pandemic. |
Institute: | Washington University in St. Louis |
Department: | Chemistry |
Laboratory: | Patti |
Last Name: | Patti |
First Name: | Gary |
Address: | McMillen Chemistry Laboratory, Washington University, 1 Brookings Dr @ Throop Drive, Rm 102, St. Louis, MO 63130-4899 |
Email: | gjpattij@wustl.edu |
Phone: | 314-935-3512 |
Subject:
Subject ID: | SU001930 |
Subject Type: | Mammal |
Subject Species: | Mesocricetus auratus |
Taxonomy ID: | 10036 |
Factors:
Subject type: Mammal; Subject species: Mesocricetus auratus (Factor headings shown in green)
mb_sample_id | local_sample_id | Group | Day post infection |
---|---|---|---|
SA174153 | P H-473 | Influenza | 14 |
SA174154 | P H-497 | Influenza | 14 |
SA174155 | P H-499 | Influenza | 14 |
SA174156 | P H-496 | Influenza | 14 |
SA174157 | P H-467 | Influenza | 14 |
SA174158 | P H-483 | Influenza | 14 |
SA174159 | P H-502 | Influenza | 2 |
SA174160 | P H-505 | Influenza | 2 |
SA174161 | P H-492 | Influenza | 2 |
SA174162 | P H-506 | Influenza | 2 |
SA174163 | P H-474 | Influenza | 2 |
SA174164 | P H-478 | Influenza | 2 |
SA174165 | P H-457 | Influenza | 4 |
SA174166 | P H-458 | Influenza | 4 |
SA174167 | P H-460 | Influenza | 4 |
SA174168 | P H-433 | Influenza | 4 |
SA174169 | P H-466 | Influenza | 4 |
SA174170 | P H-498 | Influenza | 4 |
SA174171 | P H-486 | Influenza | 6 |
SA174172 | P H-477 | Influenza | 6 |
SA174173 | P H-491 | Influenza | 6 |
SA174174 | P H-462 | Influenza | 6 |
SA174175 | P H-461 | Influenza | 6 |
SA174176 | P H-515 | Influenza | 6 |
SA174177 | P H-501 | Mock | 14 |
SA174178 | P H-490 | Mock | 14 |
SA174179 | P H-489 | Mock | 14 |
SA174180 | P H-475 | Mock | 14 |
SA174181 | P H-470 | Mock | 14 |
SA174182 | P H-481 | Mock | 14 |
SA174183 | P H-507 | Mock | 4 |
SA174184 | P H-464 | Mock | 4 |
SA174185 | P H-472 | Mock | 4 |
SA174186 | P H-482 | Mock | 4 |
SA174187 | P H-476 | Mock | 4 |
SA174188 | P H-480 | Mock | 4 |
SA174189 | P H-510 | SARS-CoV-2 | 14 |
SA174190 | P H-511 | SARS-CoV-2 | 14 |
SA174191 | P H-484 | SARS-CoV-2 | 14 |
SA174192 | P H-459 | SARS-CoV-2 | 14 |
SA174193 | P H-485 | SARS-CoV-2 | 14 |
SA174194 | P H-479 | SARS-CoV-2 | 14 |
SA174195 | P H-513 | SARS-CoV-2 | 2 |
SA174196 | P H-516 | SARS-CoV-2 | 2 |
SA174197 | P H-469 -1 | SARS-CoV-2 | 2 |
SA174198 | P H-514 | SARS-CoV-2 | 4 |
SA174199 | P H-469 -2 | SARS-CoV-2 | 4 |
SA174200 | P H-488 | SARS-CoV-2 | 4 |
SA174201 | P H-471 | SARS-CoV-2 | 4 |
SA174202 | P H-487 | SARS-CoV-2 | 4 |
SA174203 | P H-463 | SARS-CoV-2 | 6 |
SA174204 | P H-509 | SARS-CoV-2 | 6 |
SA174205 | P H-504 | SARS-CoV-2 | 6 |
SA174206 | P H-495 | SARS-CoV-2 | 6 |
SA174207 | P H-468 | SARS-CoV-2 | 6 |
SA174208 | P H-512 | SARS-CoV-2 | 6 |
Showing results 1 to 56 of 56 |
Collection:
Collection ID: | CO001923 |
Collection Summary: | Outbred female LVG golden Syrian hamsters (6-8 weeks of age) were obtained from Charles River Laboratories (Kingston, NY). The hamsters were anesthetized by intraperitoneal injection of a mixture of ketamine and xylazine prior to intranasal inoculation with 0.1 mL of 1e5 plaque-forming units (PFU) of SARS-CoV-2 (WA-1) or H1N1 influenza A virus (A/California/04/2009). On day 2, 4, 6, and 14 after infection, 3-6 anesthetized hamsters per infection group were euthanized by exsanguination followed by intracardiac injection of veterinary euthanasia solution (SleepAway; Fort Dodge). Plasma samples were treated by exposure to germicidal UV-C light. |
Sample Type: | Blood (plasma) |
Treatment:
Treatment ID: | TR001942 |
Treatment Summary: | The hamsters were anesthetized by intraperitoneal injection of a mixture of ketamine and xylazine prior to intranasal inoculation with 0.1 mL of 1e5 plaque-forming units (PFU) of SARS-CoV-2 (WA-1) or H1N1 influenza A virus (A/California/04/2009). |
Sample Preparation:
Sampleprep ID: | SP001936 |
Sampleprep Summary: | Hamster plasma samples were diluted 1:4 with methanol (v/v), vortexed for 30 seconds, and incubated at -20 C for 2 hours. Samples were centrifuged for 10 minutes at 13,500 x g at 4°C and supernatant was transferred to a new centrifuge tube, concentrated, and stored at -80 C until reconstitution. Hamster plasma was thawed on ice. A 50 µL aliquot was transferred onto the solid-phase-extraction (SPE)-system CAPTIVA-EMR Lipid 96-wellplate (Agilent Technologies) before addition of 250 µL of acetonitrile containing 1% formic acid (v/v) and 10 µM internal standard (consisting of uniformly 13C and 15N labeled amino acids from Cambridge Isotope Laboratories, Inc). The samples were mixed for 1 min at 360 rpm on an orbital shaker at room temperature prior to a 10 min incubation period at 4 C. Afterwards, 200 µL 80% acetonitrile in water (v/v) were added to the samples. The samples were mixed on an orbital shaker (360 rpm) for an additional 10 min at room temperature. The samples were then eluted into a 96-deepwell collection plate by centrifugation (10 min, 57 x g, 4 C followed by 2 min, 1000 x g, 4 C). Polar eluates were stored at -80 C until the day of LC/MS analysis. The SPE-plates were then washed twice with 500 µL 80% acetonitrile in water (v/v). Lipids still bound to the SPE-material were then released into a second elution plate, in two elution steps applying 2x 500 µL 1:1 methyl tert-butyl ether:methanol (v/v) onto the SPE cartridge and centrifuging for 2 min at 1000 g and 4 C. The combined eluates were dried under a stream of nitrogen (Biotage SPE Dry Evaporation System) at room temperature and reconstituted with 100 µL 1:1 2-propanol:methanol (v/v) prior to LC/MS analysis. |
Combined analysis:
Analysis ID | AN003001 | AN003002 | AN003003 | AN003004 |
---|---|---|---|---|
Analysis type | MS | MS | MS | MS |
Chromatography type | HILIC | HILIC | Reversed phase | Reversed phase |
Chromatography system | Agilent 1290 Infinity II | Agilent 1290 Infinity II | Agilent 1290 Infinity II | Agilent 1290 Infinity II |
Column | SeQuant ZIC-pHILIC (100 x 2.1mm,5um) including a ZIC-pHILIC guard (2.1 mm x 20 mm,5um) | SeQuant ZIC-pHILIC (100 x 2.1mm,5um) including a ZIC-pHILIC guard (2.1 mm x 20 mm,5um) | Waters ACQUITY UPLC HSS T3 (150 x 2.1mm,1.8um) including an Acquity UPLC® HSS T3 VanGuard Pre-Column (2.1 x 5mm,1.8 µm) | Waters ACQUITY UPLC HSS T3 (150 x 2.1mm,1.8um) including an Acquity UPLC® HSS T3 VanGuard Pre-Column (2.1 x 5mm,1.8 µm) |
MS Type | ESI | ESI | ESI | ESI |
MS instrument type | QTOF | QTOF | QTOF | QTOF |
MS instrument name | Agilent 6540 QTOF | Agilent 6540 QTOF | Agilent 6545 QTOF | Agilent 6545 QTOF |
Ion Mode | POSITIVE | NEGATIVE | POSITIVE | NEGATIVE |
Units | Relative Intensity | Relative Intensity | Relative Intensity | Relative Intensity |
Chromatography:
Chromatography ID: | CH002226 |
Chromatography Summary: | An aliquot of 2 µL of polar metabolite extract was subjected to LC/MS analysis by using an Agilent 1290 Infinity II liquid-chromatography (LC) system coupled to an Agilent 6540 Quadrupole-Time-of-Flight (Q-TOF) mass spectrometer with a dual Agilent Jet Stream electrospray ionization source. Polar metabolites were separated on a SeQuant® ZIC®-pHILIC column (100 x 2.1 mm, 5 µm, polymer, Merck-Millipore) including a ZIC®-pHILIC guard column (2.1 mm x 20 mm, 5 µm). The column compartment temperature was maintained at 40 C and the flow rate was set to 250 µLmin-1. The mobile phases consisted of A: 95% water, 5% acetonitrile, 20 mM ammonium bicarbonate, 0.1% ammonium hydroxide solution (25% ammonia in water), 2.5 µM medronic acid, and B: 95% acetonitrile, 5% water, 2.5 µM medronic acid. The following linear gradient was applied: 0 to 1 min, 90% B; 12 min, 35% B; 12.5 to 14.5 min, 25% B; 15 min, 90% B followed by a re-equilibration phase of 4 min at 400 µLmin-1 and 2 min at 250 µLmin-1. |
Instrument Name: | Agilent 1290 Infinity II |
Column Name: | SeQuant ZIC-pHILIC (100 x 2.1mm,5um) including a ZIC-pHILIC guard (2.1 mm x 20 mm,5um) |
Column Temperature: | 40 |
Flow Gradient: | 0 to 1 min, 90% B; 12 min, 35% B; 12.5 to 14.5 min, 25% B; 15 min, 90% B followed by a re-equilibration phase of 4 min |
Flow Rate: | 250ul/min |
Solvent A: | 95% water/5% acetonitrile; 20 mM ammonium bicarbonate; 0.1% ammonium hydroxide; 2.5 µM medronic acid |
Solvent B: | 95% acetonitrile/5% water; 2.5 µM medronic acid |
Chromatography Type: | HILIC |
Chromatography ID: | CH002227 |
Chromatography Summary: | An aliquot of 2 µL of lipid extract was subjected to LC/MS analysis by using an Agilent 1290 Infinity II LC-system coupled to an Agilent 6545 Q-TOF mass spectrometer with a dual Agilent Jet Stream electrospray ionization source. Lipids were separated on an Acquity UPLC® HSS T3 column (2.1 x 150 mm, 1.8 µm) including an Acquity UPLC® HSS T3 VanGuard Pre-Column (2.1 x 5mm, 1.8 µm) at a temperature of 60 C and a flow rate of 250 µLmin-1. The mobile phases consisted of A: 60% acetonitrile, 40% water, 0.1% formic acid, 10 mM ammonium formate, 2.5 µM medronic acid, and B: 90% 2-propanol, 10% acetonitrile, 0.1% formic acid, 10 mM ammonium formate (dissolved in 1 mL water). The following linear gradient was used: 0-2 min, 30% B; 17 min, 75% B; 20 min, 85%; 23-26 min, 100% B; 26, 30% B followed by a re-equilibration phase of 5 min. |
Instrument Name: | Agilent 1290 Infinity II |
Column Name: | Waters ACQUITY UPLC HSS T3 (150 x 2.1mm,1.8um) including an Acquity UPLC® HSS T3 VanGuard Pre-Column (2.1 x 5mm,1.8 µm) |
Column Temperature: | 60 |
Flow Gradient: | The following linear gradient was used: 0-2 min, 30% B; 17 min, 75% B; 20 min, 85%; 23-26 min, 100% B; 26, 30% B followed by a re-equilibration phase of 5 min. |
Flow Rate: | 0.25ml/min |
Solvent A: | 60% acetonitrile/40% water; 0.1% formic acid; 10mM ammonium formate; 2.5uM medronic acid |
Solvent B: | 90% isopropanol/10% acetonitrile; 0.1% formic acid; 10 mM ammonium formate |
Chromatography Type: | Reversed phase |
MS:
MS ID: | MS002790 |
Analysis ID: | AN003001 |
Instrument Name: | Agilent 6540 QTOF |
Instrument Type: | QTOF |
MS Type: | ESI |
MS Comments: | gas temperature 200 C, drying gas flow 10 L*min-1, nebulizer pressure 44 psi, sheath gas temperature 300 C, sheath gas flow 12 L*min-1, VCap 3000 V, nozzle voltage 2000 V, Fragmentor 100 V, Skimmer 65 V, Oct 1 RF Vpp 750 V, and m/z range 50-1700. Data were acquired under continuous reference mass correction at m/z 121.0509 and 922.0890 for positive ion mode and m/z 119.0363 and 966.0007 for negative ion mode. Polar metabolite identifications were supported by matching the retention time, accurate mass, and MS/MS fragmentation data to our in-house retention time and MS/MS library created from authentic reference standards (Mass Spectrometry Metabolite Library supplied by IROA Technologies, Millipore Sigma, St. Louis, MO, USA) and online MS/MS libraries (Human Metabolome Database (HMDB, https://hmdb.ca), Mass Bank of North America (MoNA, https://mona.fiehnlab.ucdavis.edu/), and mzCloud (https://mzcloud.org). Lipid iterative MS/MS data were annotated with the Agilent Lipid Annotator software. All data files were then analyzed in Skyline (Version 20.1.0.155) to obtain peak areas. |
Ion Mode: | POSITIVE |
MS ID: | MS002791 |
Analysis ID: | AN003002 |
Instrument Name: | Agilent 6540 QTOF |
Instrument Type: | QTOF |
MS Type: | ESI |
MS Comments: | gas temperature 200 C, drying gas flow 10 L*min-1, nebulizer pressure 44 psi, sheath gas temperature 300 C, sheath gas flow 12 L*min-1, VCap 3000 V, nozzle voltage 2000 V, Fragmentor 100 V, Skimmer 65 V, Oct 1 RF Vpp 750 V, and m/z range 50-1700. Data were acquired under continuous reference mass correction at m/z 121.0509 and 922.0890 for positive ion mode and m/z 119.0363 and 966.0007 for negative ion mode. Polar metabolite identifications were supported by matching the retention time, accurate mass, and MS/MS fragmentation data to our in-house retention time and MS/MS library created from authentic reference standards (Mass Spectrometry Metabolite Library supplied by IROA Technologies, Millipore Sigma, St. Louis, MO, USA) and online MS/MS libraries (Human Metabolome Database (HMDB, https://hmdb.ca), Mass Bank of North America (MoNA, https://mona.fiehnlab.ucdavis.edu/), and mzCloud (https://mzcloud.org). Lipid iterative MS/MS data were annotated with the Agilent Lipid Annotator software. All data files were then analyzed in Skyline (Version 20.1.0.155) to obtain peak areas. |
Ion Mode: | NEGATIVE |
MS ID: | MS002792 |
Analysis ID: | AN003003 |
Instrument Name: | Agilent 6545 QTOF |
Instrument Type: | QTOF |
MS Type: | ESI |
MS Comments: | gas temperature 250 C, drying gas flow 11 L*min-1, nebulizer pressure 35 psi, sheath gas temperature 300 C, sheath gas flow 12 L*min-1, VCap 3000 V, nozzle voltage 500 V, Fragmentor 160 V, Skimmer 65 V, Oct 1 RF Vpp 750 V, and m/z range 50-1700. Data were acquired under continuous reference mass correction at m/z 121.0509 and 922.0890 in positive ion mode and m/z 119.0363 and 966.0007 in negative ion mode. Polar metabolite identifications were supported by matching the retention time, accurate mass, and MS/MS fragmentation data to our in-house retention time and MS/MS library created from authentic reference standards (Mass Spectrometry Metabolite Library supplied by IROA Technologies, Millipore Sigma, St. Louis, MO, USA) and online MS/MS libraries (Human Metabolome Database (HMDB, https://hmdb.ca), Mass Bank of North America (MoNA, https://mona.fiehnlab.ucdavis.edu/), and mzCloud (https://mzcloud.org). Lipid iterative MS/MS data were annotated with the Agilent Lipid Annotator software. All data files were then analyzed in Skyline (Version 20.1.0.155) to obtain peak areas. |
Ion Mode: | POSITIVE |
MS ID: | MS002793 |
Analysis ID: | AN003004 |
Instrument Name: | Agilent 6545 QTOF |
Instrument Type: | QTOF |
MS Type: | ESI |
MS Comments: | gas temperature 250 C, drying gas flow 11 L*min-1, nebulizer pressure 35 psi, sheath gas temperature 300 C, sheath gas flow 12 L*min-1, VCap 3000 V, nozzle voltage 500 V, Fragmentor 160 V, Skimmer 65 V, Oct 1 RF Vpp 750 V, and m/z range 50-1700. Data were acquired under continuous reference mass correction at m/z 121.0509 and 922.0890 in positive ion mode and m/z 119.0363 and 966.0007 in negative ion mode. Polar metabolite identifications were supported by matching the retention time, accurate mass, and MS/MS fragmentation data to our in-house retention time and MS/MS library created from authentic reference standards (Mass Spectrometry Metabolite Library supplied by IROA Technologies, Millipore Sigma, St. Louis, MO, USA) and online MS/MS libraries (Human Metabolome Database (HMDB, https://hmdb.ca), Mass Bank of North America (MoNA, https://mona.fiehnlab.ucdavis.edu/), and mzCloud (https://mzcloud.org). Lipid iterative MS/MS data were annotated with the Agilent Lipid Annotator software. All data files were then analyzed in Skyline (Version 20.1.0.155) to obtain peak areas. |
Ion Mode: | NEGATIVE |