Comprehensive Blood Metabolome and Exposome Analysis, Annotation, and Interpretation in E-Waste Workers.
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Metabolites
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Abstract: Background: Electronic and electrical waste (e-waste) production has emerged to be
of global environmental public health concern. E-waste workers, who are frequently exposed to
hazardous chemicals through occupational activities, face considerable health risks. Methods: To
investigate the metabolic and exposomic changes in these workers, we analyzed whole blood samples
from 100 male e-waste workers and 49 controls from the GEOHealth II project (2017–2018 in Accra,
Ghana) using LC-MS/MS. A specialized computational workflow was established for exposomics
data analysis, incorporating two curated reference libraries for metabolome and exposome profiling.
Two feature detection algorithms, asari and centWave, were applied. Results: In comparison to cent-Wave, asari showed better sensitivity in detecting MS features, particularly at trace levels. Principal
component analysis demonstrated distinct metabolic profiles between e-waste workers and controls,
revealing significant disruptions in key metabolic pathways, including steroid hormone biosynthesis, drug metabolism, bile acid biosynthesis, vitamin metabolism, and prostaglandin biosynthesis.
Correlation analyses linked metal exposures to alterations in hundreds to thousands of metabolic
features. Functional enrichment analysis highlighted significant perturbations in pathways related to
liver function, vitamin metabolism, linoleate metabolism, and dynorphin signaling, with the latter
being observed for the first time in e-waste workers. Conclusions: This study provides new insights
into the biological impact of prolonged metal exposure in e-waste workers.
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Debrah, I., Zhong, D., Machani, M. G., Nattoh, G., Ochwedo, K. O., Morang’a, C. M., ... & Yan, G. (2025). Metabolic resistance to pyrethroids with possible involvement of non-coding ribonucleic acids in Anopheles funestus, the major malaria vector in western Kenya. BMC genomics, 26(1), 64.
