TY - JOUR T1 - Untargeted metabolomic analysis in naturally occurring canine diabetes mellitus identifies similarities to human Type 1 Diabetes JF - bioRxiv DO - 10.1101/139113 SP - 139113 AU - Allison L. O’Kell AU - Timothy J. Garrett AU - Clive Wasserfall AU - Mark A. Atkinson Y1 - 2017/01/01 UR - http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2017/05/17/139113.abstract N2 - While predominant as a disease entity, knowledge voids exist regarding the pathogenesis of canine diabetes. To test the hypothesis that diabetic dogs have similar metabolomic perturbations to humans with type 1 diabetes (T1D), we analyzed serum metabolomic profiles of breed- and body weight-matched, diabetic (n=6) and healthy (n=6) dogs by liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry (LC-MS) profiling. We report distinct clustering of diabetic and control groups based on heat map analysis of known and unknown metabolites. Random forest classification identified 5/6 dogs per group correctly with overall out of bag error rate=16.7%. Diabetic dogs demonstrated significant upregulation of glycolysis/gluconeogenesis intermediates (e.g., glucose/fructose, C6H12O6, keto-hexose, deoxy-hexose, (P<0.01)), with significant downregulation of tryptophan metabolism metabolites (e.g., picolinic acid, indoxyl sulfate, anthranilate, (P<0.01)). Multiple amino acids (AA), AA metabolites, and bile acids were also significantly lower in diabetic versus healthy dogs (P<0.05) with the exception of the branched chain AA valine, which was elevated in diabetic animals (P<0.05). Metabolomic profiles in diabetic versus healthy dogs shared similarities with those reported in human T1D (e.g., alterations in glycolysis/gluconeogensis metabolites, bile acids, and elevated branched chain AA). Further studies are warranted to evaluate the utility of canine diabetes to provide novel mechanistic insights to the human disorder.AA(amino acid)AAb(autoantibody)FA(fatty acid)HILIC(hydrophilic interaction liquid interaction chromatography)LC-MS(liquid chromatography mass spectrometry)OOB(out of bag)T1D(type 1 diabetes)T2D(type 2 diabetes)UF(University of Florida) ER -