Literature DB >> 25403096

The impact of free or standardized lifestyle and urine sampling protocol on metabolome recognition accuracy.

Sandra Wallner-Liebmann1, Ewa Gralka, Leonardo Tenori, Manuela Konrad, Peter Hofmann, Martina Dieber-Rotheneder, Paola Turano, Claudio Luchinat, Kurt Zatloukal.   

Abstract

Urine contains a clear individual metabolic signature, although embedded within a large daily variability. Given the potential of metabolomics to monitor disease onset from deviations from the "healthy" metabolic state, we have evaluated the effectiveness of a standardized lifestyle in reducing the "metabolic" noise. Urine was collected from 24 (5 men and 19 women) healthy volunteers over a period of 10 days: phase I, days 1-7 in a real-life situation; phase II, days 8-10 in a standardized diet and day 10 plus exercise program. Data on dietary intake and physical activity have been analyzed by a nation-specific software and monitored by published protocols. Urine samples have been analyzed by (1)H NMR followed by multivariate statistics. The individual fingerprint emerged and consolidated with increasing the number of samples and reaches ~100 % cross-validated accuracy for about 40 samples. Diet standardization reduced both the intra-individual and the interindividual variability; the effect was due to a reduction in the dispersion of the concentration values of several metabolites. Under standardized diet, however, the individual phenotype was still clearly visible, indicating that the individual's signature was a strong feature of the metabolome. Consequently, cohort studies designed to investigate the relation of individual metabolic traits and nutrition require multiple samples from each participant even under highly standardized lifestyle conditions in order to exploit the analytical potential of metabolomics. We have established criteria to facilitate design of urine metabolomic studies aimed at monitoring the effects of drugs, lifestyle, dietary supplements, and for accurate determination of signatures of diseases.

Entities:  

Year:  2014        PMID: 25403096      PMCID: PMC4235801          DOI: 10.1007/s12263-014-0441-3

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Genes Nutr        ISSN: 1555-8932            Impact factor:   5.523


  35 in total

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4.  Polyphenols from alcoholic apple cider are absorbed, metabolized and excreted by humans.

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Journal:  J Nutr       Date:  2002-02       Impact factor: 4.798

5.  Susceptibility of human metabolic phenotypes to dietary modulation.

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6.  Biofluid 1H NMR-based metabonomic techniques in nutrition research - metabolic effects of dietary isoflavones in humans.

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7.  Chocolate intake increases urinary excretion of polyphenol-derived phenolic acids in healthy human subjects.

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8.  Chlorogenic acid, quercetin-3-rutinoside and black tea phenols are extensively metabolized in humans.

Authors:  Margreet R Olthof; Peter C H Hollman; Michel N C P Buijsman; Johan M M van Amelsvoort; Martijn B Katan
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9.  Microbial metabolites of ingested caffeic acid are absorbed by the monocarboxylic acid transporter (MCT) in intestinal Caco-2 cell monolayers.

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10.  Urinary hippuric acid after ingestion of edible fruits.

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Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2018-02-14       Impact factor: 4.379

2.  Metabolite profiling in identifying metabolic biomarkers in older people with late-onset type 2 diabetes mellitus.

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Review 4.  The Impact of Exercise on Telomere Length, DNA Methylation and Metabolic Footprints.

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5.  Metabolite and lipoprotein profiles reveal sex-related oxidative stress imbalance in de novo drug-naive Parkinson's disease patients.

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6.  Effects of Chronic Bifidobacteria Administration in Adult Male Rats on Plasma Metabolites: A Preliminary Metabolomic Study.

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7.  A capillary electrophoresis coupled to mass spectrometry pipeline for long term comparable assessment of the urinary metabolome.

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Review 8.  High-Throughput Metabolomics by 1D NMR.

Authors:  Alessia Vignoli; Veronica Ghini; Gaia Meoni; Cristina Licari; Panteleimon G Takis; Leonardo Tenori; Paola Turano; Claudio Luchinat
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9.  DHA-Induced Perturbation of Human Serum Metabolome. Role of the Food Matrix and Co-Administration of Oat β-glucan and Anthocyanins.

Authors:  Veronica Ghini; Leonardo Tenori; Francesco Capozzi; Claudio Luchinat; Achim Bub; Corinne Malpuech-Brugere; Caroline Orfila; Luigi Ricciardiello; Alessandra Bordoni
Journal:  Nutrients       Date:  2019-12-27       Impact factor: 5.717

  9 in total

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