Literature DB >> 33566801

Charged metabolite biomarkers of food intake assessed via plasma metabolomics in a population-based observational study in Japan.

Eriko Shibutami1, Ryota Ishii2, Sei Harada3,4, Ayako Kurihara3, Kazuyo Kuwabara3, Suzuka Kato3, Miho Iida3, Miki Akiyama1,3,4,5, Daisuke Sugiyama1,3,6, Akiyoshi Hirayama4, Asako Sato4, Kaori Amano4, Masahiro Sugimoto4, Tomoyoshi Soga4,5, Masaru Tomita4,5, Toru Takebayashi1,3,4.   

Abstract

Food intake biomarkers can be critical tools that can be used to objectively assess dietary exposure for both epidemiological and clinical nutrition studies. While an accurate estimation of food intake is essential to unravel associations between the intake and specific health conditions, random and systematic errors affect self-reported assessments. This study aimed to clarify how habitual food intake influences the circulating plasma metabolome in a free-living Japanese regional population and to identify potential food intake biomarkers. To achieve this aim, we conducted a cross-sectional analysis as part of a large cohort study. From a baseline survey of the Tsuruoka Metabolome Cohort Study, 7,012 eligible male and female participants aged 40-69 years were chosen for this study. All data on patients' health status and dietary intake were assessed via a food frequency questionnaire, and plasma samples were obtained during an annual physical examination. Ninety-four charged plasma metabolites were measured using capillary electrophoresis mass spectrometry, by a non-targeted approach. Statistical analysis was performed using partial-least-square regression. A total of 21 plasma metabolites were likely to be associated with long-term food intake of nine food groups. In particular, the influential compounds in each food group were hydroxyproline for meat, trimethylamine-N-oxide for fish, choline for eggs, galactarate for dairy, cystine and betaine for soy products, threonate and galactarate for carotenoid-rich vegetables, proline betaine for fruits, quinate and trigonelline for coffee, and pipecolate for alcohol, and these were considered as prominent food intake markers in Japanese eating habits. A set of circulating plasma metabolites was identified as potential food intake biomarkers in the Japanese community-dwelling population. These results will open the way for the application of new reliable dietary assessment tools not by self-reported measurements but through objective quantification of biofluids.

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Year:  2021        PMID: 33566801      PMCID: PMC7875413          DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0246456

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  PLoS One        ISSN: 1932-6203            Impact factor:   3.240


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Review 9.  The food metabolome: a window over dietary exposure.

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