Serum metabolomics probes the molecular mechanism of action of acupuncture on metabolic pathways related to glucose metabolism in patients with polycystic ovary syndrome–related obesity
Nan Yang, Ke Ma, Weidong Liu, Ning Zhang, Zhouhua Shi, Jian Ren, Wanli Xu, Yuqiu Li, Riliang Su, Yanbo Liang, Shijun Wang, Xiuyang Li- Clinical Biochemistry
- Drug Discovery
- Pharmacology
- Molecular Biology
- General Medicine
- Biochemistry
- Analytical Chemistry
Abstract
Polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) is a common endocrine syndrome, and obesity is the most common clinical manifestation. Acupuncture is effective in treating PCOS, but the differences in the biological mechanisms of acupuncture therapy and Western medicine treatment have not been determined. Thus, the purpose of this study was to find glucose metabolism–related pathways in acupuncture treatment and differentiate them from Western medical treatment. Sixty patients with PCOS‐related obesity were randomly distributed into three groups: patients receiving (1) acupuncture treatment alone, (2) conventional Western medicine treatment, and (3) acupuncture combined with Western medicine treatment. A targeted metabolomics approach was used to identify small molecules and metabolites related to glucose metabolism in the serum of each group, and ultra‐high‐performance liquid chromatography–tandem mass spectrometry was used to analyze different metabolic fractions. The results showed acupuncture treatment modulates the activity of citric and succinic acids in the tricarboxylic acid cycle, regulates glycolytic and gluconeogenesis pathways, and improves the levels of sex hormones and energy metabolism. The intervention effects on the metabolic pathways were different between patients receiving combination therapy and patients receiving acupuncture therapy alone, suggesting that the dominant modulatory effect of Western drugs may largely conceal the efficacy of acupuncture intervention.