Dyslipidemia is a hallmark of diabetes mellitus (DM). However, specific lipid molecules closely associated with the initiation and progression of diabetes remain unclear. We used a pseudotargeted lipidomics approach to evaluate the complex lipid changes that occurred long before the diagnosis of type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) and to identify novel lipid markers for screening prediabetes mellitus (PreDM) and T2DM in patients from multiple communities.
Four hundred and eighty-one subjects consisting of T2DM, three subtypes of PreDM, and normal controls (NC) were enrolled as discovery cohort. Serum lipidomic profiles of 481 subjects were analyzed using an ultrahigh performance liquid chromatography-triple quadrupole mass spectrometry (UHPLC-QqQ-MS)-based pseudotargeted lipidomics method. The differential lipid molecules were further validated in an independent case-control study consisting of 150 PreDM, 234 T2DM and 94 NC.
Multivariate discriminative analyses show that lipidomics data have considerable potential for identifying lipidome differences among T2DM, subtypes of PreDM and NC. Statistical associations of lipid (sub)species display significant variations in 11 lipid (sub)species levels for T2DM and distinctive differences in 8 lipid (sub)species levels between prediabetic and normoglycemic individuals, with further differences in 8 lipid (sub)species levels among subtypes of PreDM. Adjusted for sex, age and BMI, only two lipid (sub)species of fatty acid (FA) and phosphatidylcholine (PC) were associated at
Our findings improve insights into the lipid metabolic complexity and interindividual variations among subtypes of PreDM and T2DM, beyond the well-known differences in dyslipidemia in clinic.