| Literature DB >> 30065791 |
Charlotte C J R Michielsen1, Enrique Almanza-Aguilera2,3, Elske M Brouwer-Brolsma1, Mireia Urpi-Sarda2,3, Lydia A Afman1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: To unravel true links between diet and health, it is important that dietary exposure is accurately measured. Currently, mainly self-reporting methods (e.g. food frequency questionnaires and 24-h recalls) are used to assess food intake in epidemiological studies. However, these traditional instruments are subjective measures and contain well-known biases. Especially, estimating the intake of the group of confectionary products, such as products containing cocoa and liquorice, remains a challenge. The use biomarkers of food intake (BFIs) may provide a more objective measurement. However, an overview of current candidate biomarkers and their validity is missing for both cocoa- and liquorice-containing foods.Entities:
Keywords: Biomarkers; Cacao; Chocolate; Cocoa; Licorice; Liquorice; Metabolites; Metabolomics
Year: 2018 PMID: 30065791 PMCID: PMC6062926 DOI: 10.1186/s12263-018-0610-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Genes Nutr ISSN: 1555-8932 Impact factor: 5.523
Fig. 1Flowchart selection of papers for biomarkers of chocolate and liquorice intake. Searches for 440 cocoa and liquorice biomarkers were done up to October 2016 and March 2017, respectively
List of reported candidate liquorice biomarkers of intake, including information about dosage, study design, number of subjects, method used, sample type and the primary references
| Dietary factor | Dose of intervention | Comparable to no. of grams of liquorice containing 0.17% GLa | Study design | Number of subjects (no. of men) | Age range (years) | BMI rangeb (kg/m2) | Analytical method | Approach | Sample type and time | Candidate biomarkers of food intake | HMDB ID* | Primary ref. | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Liquorice (products) | |||||||||||||
| Solid | Katzen Kinder by Katjes (0.05% GL) | 200 g | 135 | Acute single-dose study | 4 (1) | 26–29 | 18.6–28.6 | LC-MS/MS (LC-ESI-MS) | Targeted | Blood (0, 0:05, 1, 2, 3, 5 and 7 h) | Blood, 18-GA (highest after 6 h; 150–434 ng/ml) | HMDB0011628 | [ |
| Solid liquorice (0.23% GL) | 50, 100 and 200 g daily for 5 days | 68, 135 and 271 | Parallel intervention study (5 days) | 3 (0) | 19–23 | U | GC-MS | Targeted | Urine (all up to 5 days) | Urine, 18-GA | [ | ||
| Isolated compounds | Glycyrrhizin (GL) | 600 mg in 2 dl water (excretion study) | 353 | Acute single-dose study | 6 (5) | 24–40 | U | HPLC-UV | Targeted | Urine (all up to 4 days) | 18-GA | HMDB0037827 | [99] |
| Glycyrrhetinic acid (GA) | 500 mg | 509c | Acute single-dose study | 10 (10) | 24–38 | U | LC analyser | Targeted | Serum (0, 2, 4, 7, 10 and 24 h) | Serum, 18-GA (max after 2–4 h 13.4 μmol/l) | [ | ||
| Liquorice extract (LE) vs. glycyrrhizin | 21 g LE vs. 1600 mg GL | 941 | Acute crossover study | 16 (8) | U | U | HPLC-UV | Targeted | Plasma (up to 36 h) | 18-GA (both after LE and GL consumption) | [ | ||
| Glycyrrhetinic acid | 500, 1000 and 1500 mg with water | 294, 588 and 882 | Parallel single-dose study | 6 (6) | 27–31 | H, 176–180 cm | HPLC | Targeted | Plasma (− 0.5 h, every 30 min up to 8, 9, 10 and 12 h; 1000 mg additionally at 14 and 24 h; 1500 mg additionally at 48 h) | Plasma, 18-GA (Cmax; 500, 4.5 mg/l; 1000, 7 mg/l; 1500, 9 mg/l, tmax 3-4 h) | 18-GA glucuronides: not in HMDB | [ | |
| Liquid | Liquorice flavonoid oil (LFO, 90% MCT, 8% polyphenols, 1% glabridin) | 300, 600 and 1200 mg of LFO vs. placebo | – | Parallel single-dose study | 15 (15) | 20–60 | BW | SPE-LC-MS/MS | Targeted | Plasma (0, 2, 4, 6, 8 and 24 h) | Glabridin (Cmax at 4 h, around 0.8–2.1 ng/ml depending on the dose) | HMDB0034188 | [ |
| Mixture | Glycyrrhetic acid, glycyrrhizin and solid liquorice (0.15% GL) | 130 mg 18-GAc in water-propyleneglycol | 132 | 4-way random acute crossover study | 16 (8) | U | U | HPLC | Targeted | Plasma (− 1, 2, 2.5, 4, 5.5, 7, 8.5, 10, 11.5, 13, 14.5, 18, 22, 32, 48 and 56 h) | 18-GA (Cmax about 1000 μg/l, same after salty or sweet-tasting liquorice) | [ | |
aCalculated based on the report of the European Scientific Committee on Food, reporting a mean glycyrrhizin content in liquorice confectionery of 0.17% [96]. This is not calculated for LE and LFO, as it is unclear what the exact percentages of these compounds are in liquorice itself
bIf BMI was reported in the article, only height and/or weight were reported. If nothing was reported at all, we have written down U
cAmount GA was first converted to amount GL, as 130 mg GA is equivalent to 225 mg GL, according to [50]
*HMDB-ID is only reported once for the same candidate biomarker of food intake
18-GA 18(β)-glycyrrhetic acid or 18(β)-glycyrrhetinic acid, 3-MGA 3β-monoglucuronyl-18β-glycyrrhetinic acid, BW body weight, GC-MS gas chromatography-mass spectrometry, GL glycyrrhizin, H height, HPLC high-performance liquid chromatography, LC-ESI-MS liquid chromatography-electrospray ionization-tandem mass spectrometry, LC-MS/MS liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry, LE liquorice extract, LFO liquorice flavonoid oil, Ref. reference, SPE-LC-MS/MS solid phase extraction liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry, U unknown: values not reported in the article, UV ultraviolet, W weight
Evaluation of the validity of the identified candidate biomarkers of food intake for liquorice
| Metabolite | Bio fluid | Q1 | Q2 | Q3 | Q4 | Q5 | Q6 | Q7 | Q8 | Q9 | Sum | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Candidate liquorice biomarkers of food intake | ||||||||||||
| 18-glycyrrhetic acid | Plasma | U | U | Y | U | Y | N | U | Y | N | 3 | [ |
| Serum | U | U | Y | U | Y | N | U | Y | N | 3 | [ | |
| Blood | U | U | Y | U | N | N | U | Y | N | 2 | [ | |
| Urine | U | Y | Y | U | Y | N | U | Y | N | 4 | [ | |
| 3β-monoglucuronyl-18β-glycyrrhetinic acid | Urine | U | U | N | U | Y | N | U | Y | N | 2 | [ |
| Glabridin | Plasma | U | U | U | U | N | N | U | N | N | 0 | [ |
Y yes, N no, U unknown
Q1: Is the marker compound plausible as a specific BFI for the food or food group (chemical/biological plausibility)?
Q2: Is there a dose-response relationship at relevant intake levels of the targeted food (quantitative aspect)?
Q3: Is the single-meal time-response relationship described adequately to make a wise choice of sample type and time window (single-dose kinetics)?
Q4: Is the biomarker kinetics for repeated intakes of the food/food group described adequately providing the frequency of sampling needed to assess habitual intake (e.g. cumulative aspects)?
Q5: Has the marker been shown to be robust after intake of complex meals reflecting dietary habits of the targeted population (robustness)?
Q6: Has the marker been shown to compare well with other markers or questionnaire data for the same food/food group (reliability)?
Q7: Is the marker chemically and biologically stable during bio specimen collection and storage, making measurements reliable and feasible?
Q8: Are analytical variability (CV%), accuracy, sensitivity and specificity known as adequate for at least one reported analytical method?
Q9: Has the analysis been successfully reproduced in another laboratory (reproducibility)?