| Literature DB >> 28710143 |
Dragan Milenkovic1, Christine Morand2, Aedin Cassidy3, Aleksandra Konic-Ristic4, Francisco Tomás-Barberán5, José M Ordovas6,7, Paul Kroon8, Raffaele De Caterina9, Ana Rodriguez-Mateos10.
Abstract
Cardiometabolic disease, comprising cardiovascular diseases, type 2 diabetes, and their associated risk factors including metabolic syndrome and obesity, is the leading cause of death worldwide. Plant foods are rich sources of different groups of bioactive compounds, which might not be essential throughout life but promote health and well-being by reducing the risk of age-related chronic diseases. However, heterogeneity in the responsiveness to bioactive compounds can obscure associations between their intakes and health outcomes, resulting in the hiding of health benefits for specific population groups and thereby limiting our knowledge of the exact role of the different bioactive compounds for health. The heterogeneity in response suggests that some individuals may benefit more than others from the health effects of these bioactive compounds. However, to date, this interindividual variation after habitual intake of plant bioactive compounds has been little explored. The aim of this review is to provide an overview of the existing research that has revealed interindividual variability in the responsiveness to plant-food bioactive compound consumption regarding cardiometabolic outcomes, focusing on polyphenols, caffeine and plant sterols, and the identified potential determinants involved.Entities:
Keywords: biological responsiveness; cardiometabolic health; determinants of interindividual variability; interindividual variability; plant-food bioactives
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28710143 PMCID: PMC5502866 DOI: 10.3945/an.116.013623
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Adv Nutr ISSN: 2161-8313 Impact factor: 8.701
Summary of studies that revealed interindividual variability in biomarkers of cardiometabolic health after the consumption of plant-food bioactive compounds
| Bioactive family, reference | Bioactive compound or food | Dose, unit/d | Study design | Duration | Participants, | Participant characteristics | Variable biomarker | Determinant of variability |
| Polyphenols | ||||||||
| Franklin et al. ( | Cocoa extract | 1.4 g | Parallel | 4 wk | 50 | Healthy obese men and women | oxLDL | Sex |
| Wilson et al. ( | Cocoa flavanols | 450 mg | Parallel study | 14 d | 42 | Young and elderly healthy men | Systolic blood pressure and arterial stiffness | Age |
| Egert et al. ( | Cocoa flavanols | 814 mg | Crossover | 4 wk | 30 | Overweight adults | Arterial stiffness | Sex |
| Avolio et al. ( | Cocoa flavanols | 821 mg | Longitudinal study | 4–6 d | 34 | Healthy young and elderly subjects | Blood pressure and endothelial function | Age |
| McLean and LeCouter ( | Cocoa flavanols | 907 mg | Crossover | Acute | 42 | Healthy subjects | Platelet function | Sex |
| Thijssen et al. ( | Green tea catechin | 836 mg | Acute study | Acute | 20 | Healthy obese men and women | Blood pressure, pulse stiffness index, insulin | Genetic polymorphism in |
| Fisher and Hollenberg ( | Green tea catechin | 1.06 g | Randomized, double-blind, crossover study | Acute | 50 | Healthy male subjects | Blood pressure, vascular function (digital volume pulse) | Genetic polymorphism in |
| Mubarak et al. ( | Quercetin | 150 mg | Crossover | 6 wk | 93 | Overweight or obese young and elderly subjects | Systolic blood pressure | Age and disease state (hypertension) |
| Sachse et al. ( | Isoflavones | 99 mg | Parallel study | 1 y | 202 | Postmenopausal women | Blood pressure and endothelial function | Gut microbiota (equol producers) |
| Mackay et al. ( | Isoflavones | 30–52 g | Parallel | 1 mo | 85 | Hypercholesterolemic men and postmenopausal, hypercholesterolemic women | HDL-C | Gut microbiota (equol producers) |
| Nagao et al. ( | S-equol | 10 mg | Crossover | 12 wk | 54 | Overweight or obese volunteers | Hba1c and LDL-C–CAV1 | Gut microbiota (equol producers) and sex |
| Coffee | ||||||||
| Rodriguez-Mateos et al. ( | Coffee | 600 mL | Parallel | 4 wk | 121 | Healthy men and women | TC | Genetic polymorphism in |
| Weber et al. ( | Coffee | 600 mL | Parallel | 4 wk | 120 | Healthy men and women | Blood homocysteine | Genetic polymorphism in |
| Corretti et al. ( | Caffeine | 3 mg/kg | Crossover | Acute | 110 | Healthy men | Blood pressure | Genetic polymorphism in |
| Plant sterols | ||||||||
| Hollman et al. ( | Plant sterol | 2 g | Crossover | 28 d | 63 | Mildly hypercholesterolemic adults | TC and LDL-C | Basal cholesterol metabolism |
| Ostertag et al. ( | Plant sterol | 1.1 and 2.2 g | Parallel | 5 wk | 217 | Hypercholesterolemic adults | TC, LDL-C, apoB, and TC:LDL-C and LDL:HDL ratios | Genetic polymorphism in |
| West et al. ( | Plant sterol | 2 g | Crossover | 4 wk | 82 | Hypercholesterolemic men | LDL-C | Genetic polymorphism in |
| Kaya et al. ( | Plant sterol | 2 g | Crossover | 4 wk | 113 | Hypercholesterolemic subjects | LDL-C | Basal cholesterol metabolism |
| Ibero-Baraibar et al. ( | Plant sterol | 3.2 g | Parallel | 4 wk | 67 | Men and women with normal or increased blood cholesterol concentration | TC | Genetic polymorphism in |
ABCG8, ATP-binding cassette heterodimeric transporters G8; ADORA2A, adenosine A2a receptor; ADORA2B, α-2B adrenergic receptor; CAV1, cardio-ankle vascular index; COMT, catechol-O-methyltransferase; CYP7A1, cholesterol 7 α-hydroxylase; Hba1c, glycated hemoglobin; HDL-C, HDL cholesterol; LDL-C, LDL cholesterol; MTHFR, methylenetetrahydrofolate reductase; NPC1L1, Niemann-Pick C1 Like 1; oxLDL, oxidized LDL; TC, total cholesterol.
FIGURE 1Schematic presentation of factors involved in the interindividual variability in biomarkers of cardiometabolic health in response to the consumption of plant-food bioactive compounds. CRP, C-reactive protein; sICAM1, soluble intercellular adhesion molecule 1.