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Nutriome-metabolome relationships provide insights into dietary intake and metabolism

Authors :
Gary Frost
Elaine Holmes
Jeremy K. Nicholson
Joram M. Posma
Isabel Garcia-Perez
Jeremiah Stamler
Paul Elliott
Linda Van Horn
Ghadeer S Aljuraiban
Martha L. Daviglus
Queenie Chan
Medical Research Council (MRC)
Medical Research Council
National Institutes of Health
UK DRI Ltd
National Institute for Health Research
Source :
Nat Food
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Dietary assessment traditionally relies on self-reported data which are often inaccurate and may result in erroneous diet-disease risk associations. We illustrate how urinary metabolic phenotyping can be used as alternative approach for obtaining information on dietary patterns. We used two multi-pass 24-hr dietary recalls, obtained on two occasions on average three weeks apart, paired with two 24-hr urine collections from 1,848 U.S. individuals; 67 nutrients influenced the urinary metabotype measured with (1)H-NMR spectroscopy characterized by 46 structurally identified metabolites. We investigated the stability of each metabolite over time and showed that the urinary metabolic profile is more stable within individuals than reported dietary patterns. The 46 metabolites accurately predicted healthy and unhealthy dietary patterns in a free-living U.S. cohort and replicated in an independent U.K. cohort. We mapped these metabolites into a host-microbial metabolic network to identify key pathways and functions. These data can be used in future studies to evaluate how this set of diet-derived, stable, measurable bioanalytical markers are associated with disease risk. This knowledge may give new insights into biological pathways that characterize the shift from a healthy to unhealthy metabolic phenotype and hence give entry points for prevention and intervention strategies.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nat Food
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....d62aad771632a3cb270bdbd3295772a9