| Literature DB >> 28974991 |
Lars O Dragsted1, Qian Gao1, Giulia Praticò1,2, Claudine Manach3, David S Wishart4, Augustin Scalbert5, Edith J M Feskens6.
Abstract
In the dietary and health research area, biomarkers are extensively used for multiple purposes. These include biomarkers of dietary intake and nutrient status, biomarkers used to measure the biological effects of specific dietary components, and biomarkers to assess the effects of diet on health. The implementation of biomarkers in nutritional research will be important to improve measurements of dietary intake, exposure to specific dietary components, and of compliance to dietary interventions. Biomarkers could also help with improved characterization of nutritional status in study volunteers and to provide much mechanistic insight into the effects of food components and diets. Although hundreds of papers in nutrition are published annually, there is no current ontology for the area, no generally accepted classification terminology for biomarkers in nutrition and health, no systematic validation scheme for these biomarker classes, and no recent systematic review of all proposed biomarkers for food intake. While advanced databases exist for the human and food metabolomes, additional tools are needed to curate and evaluate current data on dietary and health biomarkers. The Food Biomarkers Alliance (FoodBAll) under the Joint Programming Initiative-A Healthy Diet for a Healthy Life (JPI-HDHL)-is aimed at meeting some of these challenges, identifying new dietary biomarkers, and producing new databases and review papers on biomarkers for nutritional research. This current paper outlines the needs and serves as an introduction to this thematic issue of Genes & Nutrition on dietary and health biomarkers.Entities:
Keywords: Biomarker; Classification; Databases; Food intake; Metabolomics; Nutrition; Ontology; Review; Validation
Year: 2017 PMID: 28974991 PMCID: PMC5622518 DOI: 10.1186/s12263-017-0578-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Genes Nutr ISSN: 1555-8932 Impact factor: 5.523
Fig. 1A schematic overview of a framework supporting the development of dietary biomarkers. Ontology and classification scheme serve as the tools to navigate the targeted class of biomarkers. For each specific class of biomarkers, literature search would be conducted to provide reviews of the current state of knowledge on putative biomarkers. Putative biomarkers may also be identified by new explorative research. Candidate biomarkers are selected from the putative biomarkers by removing implausible entries based on literature. A validation scheme is applied on the candidate biomarkers to assess their validity by a defined set of criteria to identify the most promising candidate biomarkers as partially or fully validated for a specified use. Further validation studies may be used to systematically validate the best candidate biomarkers. All the available information is shared in public databases to support further studies on the development of biomarkers
Fig. 2Proposed terms for initiating ontology for the dietary and health biomarker area