Assessing adherence to plant-rich dietary patterns using metabolic signatures of plant food metabolites

IF 7.6 2区 医学 Q1 NUTRITION & DIETETICS
Y. Li, Y. Xu, M. Le Sayec, T. D Spector, C. Menni, R. Gibson, A. Rodriguez-Mateos
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Diet is an important modifiable lifestyle factor for human health, and plant-rich dietary patterns are associated with lower risk of non-communicable diseases in numerous studies. However, objective assessment of plant-rich dietary exposure in nutritional epidemiology studies remains challenging. This study aimed to develop and evaluate metabolic signatures of the most widely used plant-rich dietary patterns using a targeted metabolomics method comprising of 108 plant food metabolites.A total of 218 healthy participants from the POLYNTAKE cohort were included, aged 51.5 ± 17.7 years, with 24h urine samples measured using ultra-high-performance liquid chromatography–mass spectrometry. The validation dataset employed three sample types to test the robustness of the signature, including 24h urine (ABP cohort, n = 88), plasma (POLYNTAKE cohort, n = 195), and spot urine (TwinsUK cohort, n = 198). Adherence to the plant-rich diet was assessed using a priori plant- rich dietary patterns. A combination of metabolites that evaluates the adherence and metabolic response to a specific diet was identified as metabolic signature. We applied linear regression analysis to select the metabolites significantly associated with dietary patterns (adjusting energy intake), and ridge regression to estimate penalized weights of each candidate metabolite. The correlation between metabolic signature and the dietary pattern was assessed by Spearman analysis (FDR < 0.05).The metabolic signatures consisting of 42, 22, 35, 15, 33, and 33 predictive metabolites across different subclasses were found to be associated with adherence to Amended Mediterranean Score (A-MED), Original MED (O-MED), Dietary Approaches to Stop Hypertension (DASH), Mediterranean-DASH Intervention for Neurodegenerative Delay (MIND), healthy Plant-based Diet Index (hPDI) and unhealthy PDI (uDPI), respectively. The overlapping and distinct predictive metabolites across six dietary patterns predominantly consisted of phenolic acids (n = 38), including 14 cinnamic acids, 14 hydroxybenzoic acids, seven phenylacetic acids, and three hippuric acids. Six metabolites were included in all signatures, including two lignans: enterolactone-glucuronide, enterolactone-sulfate, and four phenolic acids: cinnamic acid, cinnamic acid-4'-sulfate, 2'- hydroxycinnamic acid, and 4-methoxybenzoic acid-3-sulfate. The established signatures were robustly correlated with dietary patterns in validation dataset (r = 0.13 - 0.40, FDR < 0.05).We developed and evaluated a set of metabolic signatures that robustly reflected the adherence and metabolic response to plant-rich dietary patterns, suggesting the potential of these signatures to serve as an objective assessment of free-living eating habits.
利用植物性食物代谢物的代谢特征评估是否坚持富含植物的膳食模式
膳食是影响人类健康的一个重要的可改变的生活方式因素,在许多研究中,富含植物的膳食模式与降低非传染性疾病的风险有关。然而,在营养流行病学研究中客观评估富含植物的膳食暴露仍然具有挑战性。本研究旨在利用一种包含 108 种植物性食物代谢物的靶向代谢组学方法,开发和评估最广泛使用的富含植物性食物膳食模式的代谢特征。本研究共纳入了 POLYNTAKE 队列中的 218 名健康参与者,他们的年龄为 51.5 ± 17.7 岁,使用超高效液相色谱-质谱法测量了 24 小时尿样。验证数据集采用了三种样本类型来测试特征的稳健性,包括 24 小时尿液(ABP 队列,n = 88)、血浆(POLYNTAKE 队列,n = 195)和定点尿液(TwinsUK 队列,n = 198)。采用先验的富含植物的饮食模式来评估是否坚持富含植物的饮食。评估对特定饮食的依从性和代谢反应的代谢物组合被确定为代谢特征。我们采用线性回归分析来选择与膳食模式(调整能量摄入)显著相关的代谢物,并采用脊回归来估算每个候选代谢物的惩罚权重。代谢特征与膳食模式之间的相关性通过斯皮尔曼分析进行评估(FDR < 0.05)。结果发现,由 42、22、35、15、33 和 33 个不同亚类的预测性代谢物组成的代谢特征分别与坚持修正地中海评分(A-MED)、原始地中海评分(O-MED)、饮食疗法治疗高血压(DASH)、地中海-DASH 神经退行性延迟干预(MIND)、健康植物性膳食指数(hPDI)和不健康植物性膳食指数(uDPI)有关。六种膳食模式的重叠和独特的预测代谢物主要由酚酸组成(n = 38),包括 14 种肉桂酸、14 种羟基苯甲酸、7 种苯乙酸和 3 种马尿酸。所有特征中包括六种代谢物,包括两种木脂素:肠内酯-葡萄糖醛酸内酯、肠内酯-硫酸盐和四种酚酸:肉桂酸、肉桂酸-4'-硫酸盐、2'-羟基肉桂酸和 4-甲氧基苯甲酸-3-硫酸盐。我们开发并评估了一组代谢特征,它们有力地反映了对富含植物的膳食模式的坚持和代谢反应,这表明这些特征有可能成为对自由生活饮食习惯的客观评估。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
15.50
自引率
0.00%
发文量
190
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: Proceedings of the Nutrition Society publishes papers and abstracts presented by members and invited speakers at the scientific meetings of The Nutrition Society. The journal provides an invaluable record of the scientific research currently being undertaken, contributing to ''the scientific study of nutrition and its application to the maintenance of human and animal health.'' The journal is of interest to academics, researchers and clinical practice workers in both human and animal nutrition and related fields.
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