4.7 Article

Rate normalization for sweat metabolomics biomarker discovery

Journal

TALANTA
Volume 223, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.talanta.2020.121797

Keywords

Sweat; Sweat rate; Ion chromatography; Global metabolomics; Liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry

Funding

  1. United States Air Force subcontract [FA8650-17-6891]

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The study highlights the use of sweat as a biosource for continuous human performance assessment, emphasizing the importance of data normalization for assessing differences among individuals. Accurate localized sweat rate is crucial for effective normalization of analyte data, supporting the use of sweat in biomarker discovery efforts for predicting human performance.
As the demand for real-time exercise performance feedback increases, excreted sweat has become a biosource of interest for continuous human performance assessment. For sweat to truly fulfill this requirement, analyte concentrations must be normalized to adequately assess day-to-day differences within and among individuals. In this manuscript, data are presented highlighting the use of accurate localized sweat rate as a means for ion and global metabolomic data normalization. The results illustrate large sweat rate variability among individuals over the course of two distinct exercises protocols. Furthermore, the data show sweat rate is not symmetrical at similar locations among right and left forearms of individuals (p = 0.0007). Sweat ion conductivity analysis suggest overall sweat rate normalization reduces variability collectively among ion values and participants with principal component analysis showing 77.8% of variation in the data set attributable to sweat rate normalization. Global metabolomic analysis of sweat illustrated overall rate normalization increases the variability among test subjects with 72.7% of the variation explained by sweat rate normalization. Finally, overall rate normalized metabolomic features of sweat significantly correlated (rho >= 0.7, rho <= 0.7) with measured performance metrics of the individual, establishing the potential for sweat to be used as a biosource for performance monitoring. Collectively, these data illustrate the importance of accurate localized sweat rate determination, for analyte data normalization, in support for the use of sweat in biomarker discovery efforts to predict human performance.

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