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Featured researches published by Paul Begley.


Nature Protocols | 2011

Procedures for large-scale metabolic profiling of serum and plasma using gas chromatography and liquid chromatography coupled to mass spectrometry

Warwick B. Dunn; David Broadhurst; Paul Begley; Eva Zelena; Sue Francis-McIntyre; Nadine Anderson; Marie Brown; Joshau D Knowles; Antony Halsall; John N. Haselden; Andrew W. Nicholls; Ian D. Wilson; Douglas B. Kell; Royston Goodacre

Metabolism has an essential role in biological systems. Identification and quantitation of the compounds in the metabolome is defined as metabolic profiling, and it is applied to define metabolic changes related to genetic differences, environmental influences and disease or drug perturbations. Chromatography–mass spectrometry (MS) platforms are frequently used to provide the sensitive and reproducible detection of hundreds to thousands of metabolites in a single biofluid or tissue sample. Here we describe the experimental workflow for long-term and large-scale metabolomic studies involving thousands of human samples with data acquired for multiple analytical batches over many months and years. Protocols for serum- and plasma-based metabolic profiling applying gas chromatography–MS (GC-MS) and ultraperformance liquid chromatography–MS (UPLC-MS) are described. These include biofluid collection, sample preparation, data acquisition, data pre-processing and quality assurance. Methods for quality control–based robust LOESS signal correction to provide signal correction and integration of data from multiple analytical batches are also described.


Analyst | 2009

Mass spectrometry tools and metabolite-specific databases for molecular identification in metabolomics

Marie Brown; Warwick B. Dunn; Paul D. Dobson; Yogendra Patel; Catherine L. Winder; Sue Francis-McIntyre; Paul Begley; Kathleen M. Carroll; David Broadhurst; Andy Tseng; Neil Swainston; Irena Spasic; Royston Goodacre; Douglas B. Kell

The chemical identification of mass spectrometric signals in metabolomic applications is important to provide conversion of analytical data to biological knowledge about metabolic pathways. The complexity of electrospray mass spectrometric data acquired from a range of samples (serum, urine, yeast intracellular extracts, yeast metabolic footprints, placental tissue metabolic footprints) has been investigated and has defined the frequency of different ion types routinely detected. Although some ion types were expected (protonated and deprotonated peaks, isotope peaks, multiply charged peaks) others were not expected (sodium formate adduct ions). In parallel, the Manchester Metabolomics Database (MMD) has been constructed with data from genome scale metabolic reconstructions, HMDB, KEGG, Lipid Maps, BioCyc and DrugBank to provide knowledge on 42,687 endogenous and exogenous metabolite species. The combination of accurate mass data for a large collection of metabolites, theoretical isotope abundance data and knowledge of the different ion types detected provided a greater number of electrospray mass spectrometric signals which were putatively identified and with greater confidence in the samples studied. To provide definitive identification metabolite-specific mass spectral libraries for UPLC-MS and GC-MS have been constructed for 1,065 commercially available authentic standards. The MMD data are available at http://dbkgroup.org/MMD/.


Analytical Chemistry | 2009

Development and Performance of a Gas Chromatography−Time-of-Flight Mass Spectrometry Analysis for Large-Scale Nontargeted Metabolomic Studies of Human Serum

Paul Begley; Sue Francis-McIntyre; Warwick B. Dunn; David Broadhurst; Antony Halsall; Andy Tseng; Joshua D. Knowles; Royston Goodacre; Douglas B. Kell

A method for the preparation and GC-TOF-MS analysis of human serum samples has been developed and evaluated for application in long-term metabolomic studies. Serum samples were deproteinized using 3:1 methanol/serum, dried in a vacuum concentrator, and chemically derivatized in a two-stage process. Samples were analyzed by GC-TOF-MS with a 25 min analysis time. In addition, quality control (QC) samples were used to quantify process variability. Optimization of chemical derivatization was performed. Products were found to be stable for 30 h after derivatization. An assessment of within-day repeatability and within-week reproducibility demonstrates that excellent performance is observed with our developed method. Analyses were consistent over a 5 month period. Additional method testing, using spiked serum samples, showed the ability to define metabolite differences between samples from a population and samples spiked with metabolites standards. This methodology allows the continuous acquisition and application of data acquired over many months in long-term metabolomic studies, including the HUSERMET project (http://www.husermet.org/).


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2016

Graded perturbations of metabolism in multiple regions of human brain in Alzheimer's disease: Snapshot of a pervasive metabolic disorder

Jingshu Xu; Paul Begley; Stephanie J. Church; Stefano Patassini; Katherine A. Hollywood; Mia Jüllig; Maurice A. Curtis; Henry J. Waldvogel; Richard L.M. Faull; Richard D. Unwin; Garth J. S. Cooper

Alzheimers disease (AD) is an age-related neurodegenerative disorder that displays pathological characteristics including senile plaques and neurofibrillary tangles. Metabolic defects are also present in AD-brain: for example, signs of deficient cerebral glucose uptake may occur decades before onset of cognitive dysfunction and tissue damage. There have been few systematic studies of the metabolite content of AD human brain, possibly due to scarcity of high-quality brain tissue and/or lack of reliable experimental methodologies. Here we sought to: 1) elucidate the molecular basis of metabolic defects in human AD-brain; and 2) identify endogenous metabolites that might guide new approaches for therapeutic intervention, diagnosis or monitoring of AD. Brains were obtained from nine cases with confirmed clinical/neuropathological AD and nine controls matched for age, sex and post-mortem delay. Metabolite levels were measured in post-mortem tissue from seven regions: three that undergo severe neuronal damage (hippocampus, entorhinal cortex and middle-temporal gyrus); three less severely affected (cingulate gyrus, sensory cortex and motor cortex); and one (cerebellum) that is relatively spared. We report a total of 55 metabolites that were altered in at least one AD-brain region, with different regions showing alterations in between 16 and 33 metabolites. Overall, we detected prominent global alterations in metabolites from several pathways involved in glucose clearance/utilization, the urea cycle, and amino-acid metabolism. The finding that potentially toxigenic molecular perturbations are widespread throughout all brain regions including the cerebellum is consistent with a global brain disease process rather than a localized effect of AD on regional brain metabolism.


Diabetes | 2015

Metabolic dysfunction is restricted to the sciatic nerve in experimental diabetic neuropathy

Oliver J. Freeman; Richard D. Unwin; Andrew W. Dowsey; Paul Begley; Sumia Ali; Katherine A. Hollywood; Nitin Rustogi; Rasmus S. Petersen; Warwick B. Dunn; Garth J. S. Cooper; Natalie J. Gardiner

High glucose levels in the peripheral nervous system (PNS) have been implicated in the pathogenesis of diabetic neuropathy (DN). However, our understanding of the molecular mechanisms that cause the marked distal pathology is incomplete. We performed a comprehensive, system-wide analysis of the PNS of a rodent model of DN. We integrated proteomics and metabolomics from the sciatic nerve (SN), the lumbar 4/5 dorsal root ganglia (DRG), and the trigeminal ganglia (TG) of streptozotocin-diabetic and healthy control rats. Even though all tissues showed a dramatic increase in glucose and polyol pathway intermediates in diabetes, a striking upregulation of mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation and perturbation of lipid metabolism was found in the distal SN that was not present in the corresponding cell bodies of the DRG or the cranial TG. This finding suggests that the most severe molecular consequences of diabetes in the nervous system present in the SN, the region most affected by neuropathy. Such spatial metabolic dysfunction suggests a failure of energy homeostasis and/or oxidative stress, specifically in the distal axon/Schwann cell–rich SN. These data provide a detailed molecular description of the distinct compartmental effects of diabetes on the PNS that could underlie the distal-proximal distribution of pathology.


Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 2015

Identification of elevated urea as a severe, ubiquitous metabolic defect in the brain of patients with Huntington's disease.

Stefano Patassini; Paul Begley; Suzanne J. Reid; Jingshu Xu; Stephanie J. Church; Maurice Curtis; Mike Dragunow; Henry J. Waldvogel; Richard D. Unwin; Russell G. Snell; Richard L.M. Faull; Garth J. S. Cooper

Huntingtons disease (HD) is a neurodegenerative disorder wherein the aetiological defect is a mutation in the Huntingtons gene (HTT), which alters the structure of the huntingtin protein through the lengthening of a polyglutamine tract and initiates a cascade that ultimately leads to dementia and premature death. However, neurodegeneration typically manifests in HD only in middle age, and processes linking the causative mutation to brain disease are poorly understood. Here, our objective was to elucidate further the processes that cause neurodegeneration in HD, by measuring levels of metabolites in brain regions known to undergo varying degrees of damage. We applied gas-chromatography/mass spectrometry-based metabolomics in a case-control study of eleven brain regions in short post-mortem-delay human tissue from nine well-characterized HD patients and nine controls. Unexpectedly, a single major abnormality was evident in all eleven brain regions studied across the forebrain, midbrain and hindbrain, namely marked elevation of urea, a metabolite formed in the urea cycle by arginase-mediated cleavage of arginine. Urea cycle activity localizes primarily in the liver, where it functions to incorporate protein-derived amine-nitrogen into urea for recycling or urinary excretion. It also occurs in other cell-types, but systemic over-production of urea is not known in HD. These findings are consistent with impaired local urea regulation in brain, by up-regulation of synthesis and/or defective clearance. We hypothesize that defective brain urea metabolism could play a substantive role in the pathogenesis of neurodegeneration, perhaps via defects in osmoregulation or nitrogen metabolism. Brain urea metabolism is therefore a target for generating novel monitoring/imaging strategies and/or therapeutic interventions aimed at ameliorating the impact of HD in patients.


Journal of Maternal-fetal & Neonatal Medicine | 2016

The metabolomics of necrotising enterocolitis in preterm babies: an exploratory study

Amy Wilcock; Paul Begley; Adam Stevens; Andrew Whatmore; Suresh Victor

Abstract Objective: No single diagnostic investigation is currently available for necrotising enterocolitis (NEC). We implemented a novel, untargeted, exploratory study to determine whether metabolomics can reveal early biomarker(s) of NEC. The effect of gestational age on the metabolome was also investigated. Methods: Two serum samples were obtained from 12 preterm babies (born <30 weeks gestation) and eight term controls: sample “A” at ≤1 week of age and sample “B” once fully fed. Samples were subjected to gas chromatography–mass spectrometry. Metabolomic data was analysed by principal component analysis (PCA), univariate and network analysis. Results: Sixteen metabolite features significantly differed when B samples were compared between preterm babies who subsequently developed NEC and preterm/term controls (p value <0.05). Of these seven metabolites were linked to up-regulation of IL-1β. Significant differences in 54 metabolite features (p value <0.05) were observed between preterm and term metabolomes. Of these, 12 metabolite features were linked to one network involved in carbohydrate/lipid metabolism (p = 1 × 10−30). Conclusions: Metabolomic differences were observed in preterm babies at risk of NEC. However, sample sizes were insufficient to confidently identify a biomarker. Network modelling of preterm and term metabolomes suggest possible nutritional deficiency and altered pro-insulin action in preterm babies.


Eye | 2016

Introduction to metabolomics and its applications in ophthalmology.

Shi Zhuan Tan; Paul Begley; Graham Mullard; Katherine A. Hollywood; Paul N. Bishop

Metabolomics is the study of endogenous and exogenous metabolites in biological systems, which aims to provide comparative semi-quantitative information about all metabolites in the system. Metabolomics is an emerging and potentially powerful tool in ophthalmology research. It is therefore important for health professionals and researchers involved in the speciality to understand the basic principles of metabolomics experiments. This article provides an overview of the experimental workflow and examples of its use in ophthalmology research from the study of disease metabolism and pathogenesis to identification of biomarkers.


Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 2015

Deficient copper concentrations in dried-defatted hepatic tissue from ob/ob mice: A potential model for study of defective copper regulation in metabolic liver disease

Stephanie J. Church; Paul Begley; Nina Kureishy; Selina McHarg; Paul N. Bishop; David A. Bechtold; Richard D. Unwin; Garth J. S. Cooper

Ob/ob mice provide an animal model for non-alcoholic fatty liver disease/non-alcoholic steatohepatitis (NAFLD/NASH) in patients with obesity and type-2 diabetes. Low liver copper has been linked to hepatic lipid build-up (steatosis) in animals with systemic copper deficiency caused by low-copper diets. However, hepatic copper status in patients with NAFLD or NASH is uncertain, and a validated animal model useful for the study of hepatic copper regulation in common forms of metabolic liver disease is lacking. Here, we report parallel measurements of essential metal levels in whole-liver tissue and defatted-dried liver tissue from ob/ob and non-obese control mice. Measurements in whole-liver tissue from ob/ob mice at an age when they have developed NAFLD/NASH, provide compelling evidence for factitious lowering of copper and all other essential metals by steatosis, and so cannot be used to study hepatic metal regulation in this model. By marked contrast, metal measurements in defatted-dried liver samples reveal that most essential metals were actually normal and indicate specific lowering of copper in ob/ob mice, consistent with hepatic copper deficiency. Thus ob/ob mice can provide a model useful for the study of copper regulation in NAFLD and NASH, provided levels are measured in defatted-dried liver tissue.


Scientific Reports | 2016

Elevation of brain glucose and polyol-pathway intermediates with accompanying brain-copper deficiency in patients with Alzheimer’s disease: metabolic basis for dementia

Jingshu Xu; Paul Begley; Stephanie J. Church; Stefano Patassini; Selina McHarg; Nina Kureishy; Katherine A. Hollywood; Henry J. Waldvogel; Hong Liu; Shaoping Zhang; Wanchang Lin; Karl Herholz; Clinton Turner; Beth J. Synek; Maurice Curtis; Jack Rivers-Auty; Catherine B. Lawrence; Katherine A. B. Kellett; Nigel M. Hooper; Emma Rlc Vardy; Donghai Wu; Richard D. Unwin; Richard L.M. Faull; Andrew W. Dowsey; Garth J. S. Cooper

Impairment of brain-glucose uptake and brain-copper regulation occurs in Alzheimer’s disease (AD). Here we sought to further elucidate the processes that cause neurodegeneration in AD by measuring levels of metabolites and metals in brain regions that undergo different degrees of damage. We employed mass spectrometry (MS) to measure metabolites and metals in seven post-mortem brain regions of nine AD patients and nine controls, and plasma-glucose and plasma-copper levels in an ante-mortem case-control study. Glucose, sorbitol and fructose were markedly elevated in all AD brain regions, whereas copper was correspondingly deficient throughout (all P < 0.0001). In the ante-mortem case-control study, by contrast, plasma-glucose and plasma-copper levels did not differ between patients and controls. There were pervasive defects in regulation of glucose and copper in AD brain but no evidence for corresponding systemic abnormalities in plasma. Elevation of brain glucose and deficient brain copper potentially contribute to the pathogenesis of neurodegeneration in AD.

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Stephanie J. Church

Central Manchester University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust

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Antony Halsall

University of Manchester

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Jingshu Xu

University of Auckland

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