4.7 Article

Urinary 1H Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Metabolomic Fingerprinting Reveals Biomarkers of Pulse Consumption Related to Energy-Metabolism Modulation in a Subcohort from the PREDIMED study

Journal

JOURNAL OF PROTEOME RESEARCH
Volume 16, Issue 4, Pages 1483-1491

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.jproteome.6b00860

Keywords

pulses; legumes; metabolomics; NMR; choline metabolism; energy; biomarkers; ROC curve

Funding

  1. Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness (MINECO) [PCIN-2014-133]
  2. Joint Programming Initiative Healthy Diet for Healthy Life (JPI-HDHL)
  3. Generalitat de Catalunya's Agency [2014SGR1566]
  4. APIF Ph.D. fellowship (University of Barcelona)
  5. CONACYT (Mexico) for the Ph.D. fellowship

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Little is known about the metabolome finger, print of pulse consumption. The study of robust and accurate biomarkers for pulse dietary assessment has great value for nutritional epidemiology regarding health benefits and their mechanisms. To characterize the fingerprinting of dietary pulses (chickpeas, lentils, and beans), spot urine samples from a subcohort from the PREDIMED study were stratified using a validated food frequency questionnaire. Urine samples of nonpulse consumers (<= 4 g/day of pulse intake) and habitual pulse consumers (>= 25 g/day of pulse intake) were analyzed using a H-1 nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) metabolomics approach combined with multi and univariate data analysis. Pulse consumption showed differences through 16 metabolites coming from (i) choline metabolism, (ii) protein-related compounds, and (iii) energy metabolism (including:lower urinary glucose). Stepwise logistic regression analysis was applied to design a combined model of pulse exposure, which resulted in dimethylamine, and 3-methylhistidine: This model was evaluated by a receiver operating characteristic curve (AUC > 90% in both training and validation sets). The application of NMR-based metabolomics to reported pulse exposure highlighted new candidates for biomarkers of pulse consumption and the impact on energy metabolism, generating new hypotheses on energy modulation. Further intervention studies will confirm these findings.

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