Abstract

Traditional Korean Medicine classifies stroke into four subtype patterns according to symptomatic pattern identification: Qi deficiency (QD), Yin deficiency (YD), Dampness-phlegm (DP), and Fire and Heat (FH). This study investigated the difference in metabolic profiles of plasma comparing subjects displaying non-DP and DP patterns. A total of 141 patients with cerebral infarction enrolled in this study were distributed as non-DP ( ) and DP ( ). Anthropometric parameters and symptom/sign index were measured. Metabolic profiling was performed using ultrahigh-performance liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry. The Ratio of subjects with slippery pulse was higher in DP pattern, but fine pulse was lower than that in non-DP pattern. As a result of metabolomics analysis, twenty-one metabolites displayed different levels between non-DP and DP patterns. Two were identified as lysophosphatidylcholines (LPCs), LPC(18:2), and LPC(20:3) having an unsaturated acyl chain and showed lower levels in DP pattern than in non-DP pattern ( , 0.034, resp.). However, the saturated LPCs, LPC(18:0) and LPC(16:0), exhibited slight but statistically insignificant elevation in DP pattern. Our results demonstrated that plasma LPCs with polyunsaturated fatty acid groups were associated with DP pattern and suggest that variation of plasma lipid profiles may serve as potential biomarker for diagnosis of DP pattern.

1. Introduction

Pattern Identification (PI) is a unique diagnosis system of traditional medicine practiced in East Asian countries including China, Korea, and Japan and provides information that guides appropriate treatment of patient disease. Previous reports described how traditional Korean medicine (TKM) categorizes stroke as four patterns according to their symptoms and sign: Qi deficiency (QD), Dampness-phlegm (DP), Yin deficiency (YD), and Fire and Heat (FH) [1]. Among them, the DP pattern is attributed to the prevention of Qi-blood circulation in the body, resulting in a pathological product [2]. Most notably, the DP pattern is associated with overweight/obesity and dyslipidemia [36]. Kim et al. reported that body mass index (BMI) of subjects with DP pattern was significantly increased compared with subjects exhibiting other patterns [5], and Kang et al. showed that the levels of total cholesterol, LDL-cholesterol and triglycerides in serum of subjects displaying the DP pattern were also higher than subjects with non-DP pattern [6].

However, the diagnosis of PI depends on symptoms/sign exhibited by patients, which may be interpreted incorrectly. Therefore, it is necessary to establish scientific evidence to aid accurate diagnosis based on PI. Previously, several studies showing relation between biological factors and PI were reported [713]. In particular, NPY and UCP2 and PON1, related with obesity and dyslipidemia, were significantly associated with DP pattern in Korean stroke patients [8, 9, 13].

Metabolomics provides a powerful approach for global and quantitative assessment of endogenous small molecule metabolites within biological fluids [14] and has been utilized to propose candidate biomarkers of several diseases [1520]. Metabolites are the small chemical compounds or products involved in various metabolic pathways, and the changes of their levels serve as indicators of changes of pathology or physiology [14]. Recently, metabolomics investigations were performed to explain PI of rheumatoid arthritis and type 2 diabetes in Chinese populations [21, 22].

In this study, we analyzed metabolic profiles in plasma of acute patients with cerebral infarction (CI) by ultrahigh-performance liquid chromatography/time-of-flight mass spectrometry (UHPLC-TOFMS) and searched for metabolites differing in levels between DP and non-DP patterns.

2. Materials and Methods

2.1. Study Subjects

This study was collected as parts of the project “The Fundamental Study for the Standardization and Objectification of PI in TKM for Stroke (SOPI-Stroke)” in the Korean Institute of Oriental Medicine (KIOM) [23].

Patients with CI were admitted from 2009 to 2010 to the following Korean oriental medical hospitals participating in this study: Kyung Hee Oriental Medical Center (Seoul), Kyung Hee East-West Neo Medical Center (Seoul), Dong Guk International Hospital (Kyunggi-do), and Dae Jeon Oriental Medical Hospital (Daejeon). Subjects had to be enrolled as CI patients within three days of the onset, and their symptoms were confirmed by imaging diagnosis, using computerized tomography (CT), magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), or magnetic resonance angiography (MRA). CI subtypes were classified as large artery atherosclerosis (LAA), cardioembolism (CE), small vessel occlusion (SVO), stroke of other determined etiology (SOE), and stroke of undetermined etiology (SUE) subtype according to the trial of ORG 10172 in the Acute Stroke Treatment (TOAST) classification. Subjects with subarachnoid, subdural, or epidural hemorrhage were excluded in this study, and subjects with diabetes mellitus and stroke in history and with infectious diseases and liver diseases were also excluded.

After obtaining written informed consent from all subjects, clinical data were collected. This study was approved by the Institutional Review Boards (IRB) of the KIOM and by each of the oriental medical hospitals.

2.2. PI Diagnosis of CI Patients

The symptoms and signs of subjects were collected using “stroke PI case report form” [2], and PI diagnosis of subjects was determined by two expert TKM doctors based on “Korean Standard PIs for Stroke-III” previously reported by Lee et al. [1]. Subjects receiving differing diagnoses from the two doctors were excluded. The number of patients was 68 in non-DP and 73 in DP.

2.3. Plasma Preparation

Preparation of plasma from each subject for UHPLC-MS analysis was performed according to protocols provided by Human Serum Metabolome (HUSERMET) Consortium [24]. Briefly, 200 μL of plasma thawed on ice was thoroughly mixed with 600 μL methanol and 100 μL of internal standard solution and centrifuged at 15000 g for 15 min at 25°C. Supernatant was transferred and completely dried by using centrifugal vacuum evaporator over 4 hours. Dried samples were resolved by adding 100 μL of melting solution (acetonitrile/isopropanol/water, 3 : 2 : 2) and centrifuged at 15000 g for 15 min at 25°C. Supernatant was transferred into vial and used for UHPLC-MS analysis.

2.4. Metabolic Profiling Analysis by UHPLC-MS

A 10 μL aliquot of the concentrated plasma extract was injected into an Ascentis Express C18 column (10 cm × 2.1 mm, 2.7 μm particles: Supelco, Bellefonte, PA, USA) using a SIL-5000 autosampler (Shimadzu, Tokyo, Japan). The solvent was delivered by LC-20AD pumps (Shimadzu Co., Tokyo, Japan) at a flow rate of 0.4 mL/min, with solvent A being 0.15% aqueous formic acid and solvent B being acetonitrile/isopropanol (2 : 1). Gradient elution was performed and equilibrated with water containing 0.15% formic acid. Samples were eluted by gradient containing 0.15% formic acid for 30 min, and metabolites separated by UHPLC were assigned by MS (Waters, Milford, MA, USA). Separate injections were made for analyses conducted ESI-positive and ESI-negative modes.

The voltage of capillary and sampling cone was, respectively, set at 3 kV and 10 V, and the desolvation flow was set to 350 L/h at a temperature of 350°C. The source temperature was set to 100°C. Collecting range of MS data was m/z 100–2000 with a scan time of 0.2 s. The accurate mass and composition for the metabolite ions were calculated by MassLynx 4.1 (Waters, Milford, MA, USA) incorporated in the instrument.

2.5. Data Processing and Identification of Metabolites

Results from UHPLC-MS analyses were processed using automated peak detection, integration, and retention time alignment using MarkerLynx 4.1 software (Waters, Milford, MA, USA), and MS data were assembled into a matrix of integrated extracted ion chromatogram peak areas, organized by mass and retention time. Parameters for MarkerLynx analysis were set as follows: peak width at 5% height: 15 s, intensity threshold: 20, mass window: 0.1 amu, retention time window: 0.5 min, noise elimination level: 6, mass tolerance: 0.1 Da. Normalization of MS spectra was performed by total normalization, and peaks not detected from over 2% of subjects were excluded in the following analysis. Metabolites were annotated using searches of the ChemSpider database (http://www.chemspider.com/) and Human Metabolome Database Version 2.5 (http://www.hmdb.ca/) or/and confirmed by external standards based on retention time and mass spectra.

2.6. Statistical Analysis

The statistical analysis of our data was performed with IBM SPSS Statistics 19 (IBM Co., New York, NC, USA). Normality of continuous variables in clinical data was decided by Kolmogorov-Smirnov test, and statistical difference was determined by -test in parametric variable or Mann-Whitney test in nonparametric variable. Categorical variables were compared with a chi-squared test or Fisher’s exact test. Results of MS analysis were represented as the mean ± SD, and the difference in mass intensity of plasma metabolites between the two groups was tested by independent -test with Mann-Whitney test. The statistical significance was set at .

3. Results

The general characteristics between non-DP and DP were shown in Table 1. The mean age of the DP pattern patients was slightly higher than that of the non-DP pattern patients. BMI in body composition and total cholesterol and LDL-cholesterol in serum parameters also showed higher levels in the DP pattern patients, which was similar to previous reports by Kim et al. and Lim et al. [3, 13]. The distribution of symptoms and signs according to “Korean Standard PIs for Stroke-III,” which are parameters to decide the pattern of stroke [1], is shown in Table 2. Among pulse diagnoses, the ratio of subjects with slippery pulse in DP pattern was significantly higher (54.8%) than that in non-DP pattern (38.2%) ( ). In contrast, the fraction of subjects exhibiting weak pulse was significantly lower in DP pattern ( ).

To find metabolite levels in plasma that could differentiate non-DP and DP patterns, we performed UHPLC-MS analysis (Figure 1). A list of metabolites present in significantly different levels in plasma of non-DP and DP patterns is presented in Table 3. Three abundant metabolites, detected as ions of m/z 520.366, 1039.724, and 1043.763, in positive-ion mode and m/z 590.335 in negative-ion mode were significantly lower in the DP pattern relative to the non-DP pattern. However, most differentiating metabolites were present at much lower levels or were removed by the abundance threshold of 20 ion counts.

To identify each differentiating metabolite, public databases were searched using ion masses determined using both positive-ion and negative-ion modes. Phosphatidylcholine (PC) and lysophosphatidylcholine (LPC) lipids were identified from positive-ion mode data (Table 4). For example, the mean normalized peak areas of LPC (18 : 2; 9Z, 12Z) and LPC (20 : 3), detected as m/z 520.366 and 546.399, were 282 and 35 in DP pattern and were significantly lower than 304 and 41 in non-DP pattern ( and , resp.). Additional LPCs with unsaturated fatty acid, LPC (20 : 4) and LPC (18 : 1), also showed a tendency to be lower in DP than non-DP pattern, but without significance ( and , resp.). Otherwise, levels of LPCs without double bond, LPC (14 : 0), LPC (16 : 0), and LPC (18 : 0), were not different between two groups.

In the negative-ion mode data, a metabolite detected as m/z  590.335 was significantly lower in DP pattern ( ) and was identified as the formate ion adduct of LPC (20 : 3), confirming the result from positive-ion mode. Free fatty acids (FFA) and lysophosphatidylethanolamine (LPE), which were mainly detected in negative-ion mode analyses, were not different in the two patterns (Table 5). Only LPE(18:2) showed a tendency to be lower in the DP pattern ( ).

4. Discussion

PI presents a comprehensive system for the diagnosis of disease and is based on the patient’s signs and symptoms. TKM doctors determine the cause, nature, and treatment of the illness depending on signs and symptoms in patients and use this information to provide individualized treatment to patients, who have the same disease [3]. This approach is similar to what has been described as personalized medicine, which has recently emphasized that patients should receive different treatments according to the patient’s individual condition to increase the positive effect of treatment and reduce adverse effects [25, 26]. But general concepts between PI and personalized medicine are different. PI focuses on the signs and symptoms in patients to define a phenotype that guides treatment selection. Much of the emphasis of modern personalized medicine is based on the genetic background, or genotype, of each patient [3, 27]. Therefore, studies to establish relationships between PI and personalized medicine have been performed [10, 11, 13].

In TKM, stroke is classified into four standard subtypes according to PI: QD, DP, YD, and FH based on position, internal or external etiology, or observations of affected organ. DP, which is classified by etiology, is a combination of phlegm and internal dampness causing disease. Major symptoms of the DP pattern include anorexia, dyspepsia, dizziness, headache, and heaviness [28]. However, not all patients with DP pattern have all of these symptoms, and subjects with other patterns often exhibit some of the same symptoms. For example, only 15% of subjects had dizziness with nausea, considered a major indicator in the DP pattern, and this ratio was not different in subjects with non-DP pattern. Slippery pulse, which is an important factor for the diagnosis of DP pattern and significantly high ratio at DP pattern, occurred in the non-DP pattern (Table 2). These complexities of sign and symptoms complicate PI diagnosis and may cause diagnostic error between TKM doctors. Previous studies reported that concordance rates between two expert TKM doctors about PI diagnosis for stroke, pulse, or tongue diagnosis were 70–90%, which means that the diagnostic error may always be implied [2931]. For these reasons, reliable biomarkers for more accurate diagnosis of PI are needed.

Metabolomics provides powerful tools to measure and identify metabolic biomarkers from biofluids, and earlier studies to explain PI using the change in metabolite levels were performed in China [21, 22]. In this study, we elucidated UHPLC-MS analysis from plasma of the subjects with CI to find metabolites related with DP pattern of stroke (Figure 1). From the total of 612 peaks corresponding to specific mass-retention time pairs, 21 metabolite peaks showed significant differences in the levels between DP and non-DP patterns (Table 3). In addition, searches of open metabolome databases allowed annotation of 57 major metabolites detected using this protocol (Tables 4 and 5). The primary conclusions are that the levels of LPC (18 : 2, 9Z, 12Z) and LPC (20 : 3) were significantly lower in DP pattern than non-DP pattern ( and 0.034, resp.), and LPC (20 : 4) and LPC (18 : 1) showed a tendency to decrease in DP pattern ( and ).

Lysophosphatidylcholines (LPCs), called lysolecithins, are a class of phospholipids derived from phosphatidylcholines and produced by two pathways. First is the result from partial hydrolysis of phosphatidylcholine, so that one of the fatty acids is removed by the action of phospholipase A2 [32]. A second pathway for LPC formation occurs by the transfer of one fatty acid of phosphatidylcholine to cholesterol by lecithin-cholesterol acyltransferase (LCAT), which is an enzyme that converts free cholesterol into cholesteryl ester. Cholesteryl ester is a more hydrophobic form of cholesterol that is sequestered into the core of a lipoprotein particle [33] and into liver.

Until now, relationships between plasma levels of LPCs and DP pattern were not known, but earlier reports suggested the possibility of such correlations. It was known that DP pattern was related to obesity and hyperlipidemia [3, 8, 9], and some metabolomic analyses showed that plasma LPC levels were also associated with obesity [3437]. Barber et al. and Kim et al. reported that plasma levels of LPCs with one or two double bonds such as lyso (16 : 1), LPC (18 : 1), LPC (18 : 2), and LPC (20 : 1) were significantly reduced in high-fat diet-induced obese mice [35, 36], In another study among overweight/obese subjects performed by Kim et al., LPC (18 : 1), LPC (18 : 2), and LPC (20 : 2) were decreased in the plasma of overweight/obese subjects [37]. Of particular note in these studies was the saturated LPC (18 : 0), that increased in obese subjects and obese mice model [36, 37], and these results parallel the findings in the current investigation (Table 4).

This study showed, for the first time, that some LPCs in plasma were associated with DP pattern in CI patient population. However, this study included several limitations. First, this is a simple cross-sectional study, and the subjects enrolled in this study were very acute patients. Second, this study does not have a sufficient sample size to generalize the relationship between plasma metabolites and DP pattern. Third, the PI was limited to stroke diagnoses. The lack of evidence on the accuracy of PI forced us to perform an observational study, not allowing a randomized controlled trial. Despite of these limitations, this study provided metabolic information about DP patterns, and further studies should be performed in subjects of another large population to generalize the conclusions of this study.

Authors’ Contribution

M. H. Cha and A. D. Jones contributed equally to this work.

Acknowledgments

This research was supported by a Grant from the Korea Institute of Oriental Medicine (K12130) and funds from Michigan AgBioResearch.