4.6 Article

Blood Metabolomic Profiling Confirms and Identifies Biomarkers of Food Intake

期刊

METABOLITES
卷 10, 期 11, 页码 -

出版社

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/metabo10110468

关键词

untargeted metabolomics; biomarkers; dietary intake; metabolites; dietary assessment methods

资金

  1. Diet-Body-Brain (DietBB) the Competence Cluster in Nutrition Research - Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF) [01EA1410A, 01EA1809A]
  2. BMBF project [01EA1705A]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Metabolomics can be a tool to identify dietary biomarkers. However, reported food-metabolite associations have been inconsistent, and there is a need to explore further associations. Our aims were to confirm previously reported food-metabolite associations and to identify novel food-metabolite associations. We conducted a cross-sectional analysis of data from 849 participants (57% men) of the PopGen cohort. Dietary intake was obtained using FFQ and serum metabolites were profiled by an untargeted metabolomics approach. We conducted a systematic literature search to identify previously reported food-metabolite associations and analyzed these associations using linear regression. To identify potential novel food-metabolite associations, datasets were split into training and test datasets and linear regression models were fitted to the training datasets. Significant food-metabolite associations were evaluated in the test datasets. Models were adjusted for covariates. In the literature, we identified 82 food-metabolite associations. Of these, 44 associations were testable in our data and confirmed associations of coffee with 12 metabolites, of fish with five, of chocolate with two, of alcohol with four, and of butter, poultry and wine with one metabolite each. We did not identify novel food-metabolite associations; however, some associations were sex-specific. Potential use of some metabolites as biomarkers should consider sex differences in metabolism.

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