Understanding mixed environmental exposures using metabolomics via a hierarchical community network model in a cohort of California women in 1960's.

Journal: Reproductive toxicology (Elmsford, N.Y.)
Published Date:

Abstract

Even though the majority of population studies in environmental health focus on a single factor, environmental exposure in the real world is a mixture of many chemicals. The concept of "exposome" leads to an intellectual framework of measuring many exposures in humans, and the emerging metabolomics technology offers a means to read out both the biological activity and environmental impact in the same dataset. How to integrate exposome and metabolome in data analysis is still challenging. Here, we employ a hierarchical community network to investigate the global associations between the metabolome and mixed exposures including DDTs, PFASs and PCBs, in a women cohort with sera collected in California in the 1960s. Strikingly, this analysis revealed that the metabolite communities associated with the exposures were non-specific and shared among exposures. This suggests that a small number of metabolic phenotypes may account for the response to a large class of environmental chemicals.

Authors

  • Shuzhao Li
    Department of Medicine, School of Medicine, Emory University, Atlanta, GA, 30303, USA. Electronic address: sli49@emory.edu.
  • Piera Cirillo
    The Center for Research on Women and Children's Health, Child Health and Development Studies, Public Health Institute, 1683 Shattuck Avenue, Suite B, Berkeley, CA, 94709, USA.
  • Xin Hu
    Jiangxi Medical College, The First Affiliated Hospital, Nanchang University, Nanchang, China.
  • ViLinh Tran
    Department of Medicine, School of Medicine, Emory University, Atlanta, GA, 30303, USA.
  • Nickilou Krigbaum
    The Center for Research on Women and Children's Health, Child Health and Development Studies, Public Health Institute, 1683 Shattuck Avenue, Suite B, Berkeley, CA, 94709, USA.
  • Shaojun Yu
    School of Chinese Materia Medica, Beijing University of Chinese Medicine, Beijing 102488, China.
  • Dean P Jones
    Department of Medicine, School of Medicine, Emory University, Atlanta, GA, 30303, USA.
  • Barbara Cohn
    The Center for Research on Women and Children's Health, Child Health and Development Studies, Public Health Institute, 1683 Shattuck Avenue, Suite B, Berkeley, CA, 94709, USA. Electronic address: bcohn@chdstudies.org.