
Urine
Researchers
at the University of Alberta announced today that they have determined
the chemical composition of human urine. The study, which took more than
seven years and involved a team of nearly 20 researchers, has revealed
that more than 3,000 chemicals or “metabolites” can be detected in
urine. The results are expected to have significant implications for
medical, nutritional, drug and environmental testing.
“Urine is an incredibly complex
biofluid. We had no idea there could be so many different compounds
going into our toilets,” noted David Wishart, the senior scientist on
the project.
Wishart’s research team used
state-of-the-art analytical chemistry techniques including nuclear
magnetic resonance spectroscopy, gas chromatography, mass spectrometry
and liquid chromatography to systematically identify and quantify
hundreds of compounds from a wide range of human urine samples.
To help supplement their experimental
results, they also used computer-based data mining techniques to scour
more than 100 years of published scientific literature about human
urine. This chemical inventory — which includes chemical names,
synonyms, descriptions, structures, concentrations and disease
associations for thousands of urinary metabolites — is housed in a
freely available database called the Urine Metabolome Database, or UMDB.
The UMDB is a worldwide reference resource to facilitate clinical, drug
and environmental urinalysis. The UMDB is maintained by The
Metabolomics Innovation Centre, Canada’s national metabolomics core
facility.
The chemical composition of urine is of
particular interest to physicians, nutritionists and environmental
scientists because it reveals key information not only about a person’s
health, but also about what they have eaten, what they are drinking,
what drugs they are taking and what pollutants they may have been
exposed to in their environment. Analysis of urine for medical purposes
dates back more than 3,000 years. In fact, up until the late 1800s,
urine analysis using colour, taste and smell (called uroscopy) was one
of the primary methods early physicians used to diagnose disease. Even
today, millions of chemically based urine tests are performed every day
to identify newborn metabolic disorders, diagnose diabetes, monitor
kidney function, confirm bladder infections and detect illicit drug use.
“Most medical textbooks only list 50 to
100 chemicals in urine, and most common clinical urine tests only
measure six to seven compounds,” said Wishart. “Expanding the list of
known chemicals in urine by a factor of 30 and improving the technology
so that we can detect hundreds of urine chemicals at a time could be a
real game-changer for medical testing.” Wishart says this study is
particularly significant because it will allow a whole new generation of
fast, cheap and painless medical tests to be performed using urine
instead of blood or tissue biopsies. In particular, he notes that new
urine-based diagnostic tests for colon cancer, prostate cancer, celiac
disease, ulcerative colitis, pneumonia and organ transplant rejection
are already being developed or are about to enter the marketplace,
thanks in part to this work.
The Human Urine Metabolome paper
appeared today in PLOS ONE. The word metabolome (which is derived from
the words “metabolism” and “genome”) is defined as the complete
collection of metabolites or chemicals found in a particular organism or
tissue. The human urine study is part of a series of studies by
researchers at the University of Alberta aimed at systematically
characterizing the entire human metabolome. In 2008 the same U of A team
described the chemical composition of human cerebrospinal fluid and in
2011 they determined the chemical composition of human blood.
“This is certainly not the final word on
the chemical composition of urine,” Wishart said. “As new techniques
are developed and as more sensitive instruments are produced, I am sure
that hundreds more urinary compounds will be identified. In fact, new
compounds are being added to the UMDB almost every day.
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