4.7 Article

The Impact of Acute Nutritional Interventions on the Plasma Proteome

Journal

JOURNAL OF CLINICAL ENDOCRINOLOGY & METABOLISM
Volume 108, Issue 8, Pages 2087-2098

Publisher

ENDOCRINE SOC
DOI: 10.1210/clinem/dgad031

Keywords

caloric restriction; oral glucose tolerance test; plasma proteomics; APOC1; type 2 diabetes

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Humans exhibit profound responses to changes in diet, making it important to study the nutritional responses in depth. This study used high-throughput mass spectrometry to investigate the impact of caloric restriction and a glucose challenge on the plasma proteome, identifying proteins that correlate with metabolome and endocrine changes. The study highlights the role of APOC1 as a dominant nutritional responder and emphasizes the interdependency between acute nutritional response proteins and the endocrine system.
Context: Humans respond profoundly to changes in diet, while nutrition and environment have a great impact on population health. It is therefore important to deeply characterize the human nutritional responses. Objective: Endocrine parameters and the metabolome of human plasma are rapidly responding to acute nutritional interventions such as caloric restriction or a glucose challenge. It is less well understood whether the plasma proteome would be equally dynamic, and whether it could be a source of corresponding biomarkers. Methods: We used high-throughput mass spectrometry to determine changes in the plasma proteome of i) 10 healthy, young, male individuals in response to 2 days of acute caloric restriction followed by refeeding; ii) 200 individuals of the Ely epidemiological study before and after a glucose tolerance test at 4 time points (0, 30, 60, 120 minutes); and iii) 200 random individuals from the Generation Scotland study. We compared the proteomic changes detected with metabolome data and endocrine parameters. Results: Both caloric restriction and the glucose challenge substantially impacted the plasma proteome. Proteins responded across individuals or in an individual-specific manner. We identified nutrient-responsive plasma proteins that correlate with changes in the metabolome, as well as with endocrine parameters. In particular, our study highlights the role of apolipoprotein C1 (APOC1), a small, understudied apolipoprotein that was affected by caloric restriction and dominated the response to glucose consumption and differed in abundance between individuals with and without type 2 diabetes. Conclusion: Our study identifies APOC1 as a dominant nutritional responder in humans and highlights the interdependency of acute nutritional response proteins and the endocrine system.

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