坚果和植物油食物摄入量的生物标志物:广泛的文献检索。

Genes & Nutrition Pub Date : 2019-03-19 eCollection Date: 2019-01-01 DOI:10.1186/s12263-019-0628-8
Mar Garcia-Aloy, Paul J M Hulshof, Sheila Estruel-Amades, Maryse C J Osté, Maria Lankinen, Johanna M Geleijnse, Janette de Goede, Marynka Ulaszewska, Fulvio Mattivi, Stephan J L Bakker, Ursula Schwab, Cristina Andres-Lacueva
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引用次数: 0

摘要

坚果和植物油是脂肪以及各种微量营养素和植物化学物质的重要来源。摄入坚果和植物油后,血液循环和尿液中会发现其中的一些成分及其衍生代谢物。因此,这些物质可用于评估膳食干预的依从性或确定坚果和植物油的习惯摄入量。不过,在将这些代谢物广泛用作食物摄入量的生物标记物(BFIs)之前,必须考虑到它们的一些特性,包括特异性、剂量反应、时间反应、稳定性和分析性能。因此,我们进行了广泛的文献检索,以评估有关坚果和植物油潜在生物标志物的现有知识。一经确定,我们就对最有希望的候选 BFIs 的优缺点进行了总结。所选研究的结果提供了主要来自这些食物脂肪部分的各种化合物,以及与营养成分有关的其他成分和衍生代谢物。特别是,α-亚麻酸、尿磷脂和 5-羟基吲哚-3-乙酸似乎是核桃最可信的候选 BFIs,而杏仁则可能是 α-生育酚和一些儿茶素衍生代谢物。同样,有几项研究报告称,硒含量与巴西坚果的食用量之间存在密切联系。植物油摄入量主要是通过测量不同血液组分中的特定脂肪酸来评估的,如橄榄油中的油酸、亚麻籽油和菜籽油中的α-亚麻酸以及葵花籽油中的亚油酸。此外,羟基酪醇及其代谢物也是(特级)初榨橄榄油中最有前景的独特 BFIs。不过,这些成分大多缺乏足够的特异性来作为 BFIs。因此,有必要进行更多的研究来发现新的候选生物标志物,并进一步评估这些候选生物标志物的特异性、灵敏度、剂量反应关系和可重复性,最终在其他人群中进行验证。对于发现新的候选 BFIs,非靶向代谢组学方法可能是最有效的策略,而对于提高食物摄入量评估的特异性,可以将不同的代谢物结合起来。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Biomarkers of food intake for nuts and vegetable oils: an extensive literature search.

Biomarkers of food intake for nuts and vegetable oils: an extensive literature search.

Biomarkers of food intake for nuts and vegetable oils: an extensive literature search.

Nuts and vegetable oils are important sources of fat and of a wide variety of micronutrients and phytochemicals. Following their intake, several of their constituents, as well as their derived metabolites, are found in blood circulation and in urine. As a consequence, these could be used to assess the compliance to a dietary intervention or to determine habitual intake of nuts and vegetable oils. However, before these metabolites can be widely used as biomarkers of food intake (BFIs), several characteristics have to be considered, including specificity, dose response, time response, stability, and analytical performance. We have, therefore, conducted an extensive literature search to evaluate current knowledge about potential BFIs of nuts and vegetable oils. Once identified, the strengths and weaknesses of the most promising candidate BFIs have been summarized. Results from selected studies have provided a variety of compounds mainly derived from the fatty fraction of these foods, but also other components and derived metabolites related to their nutritional composition. In particular, α-linolenic acid, urolithins, and 5-hydroxyindole-3-acetic acid seem to be the most plausible candidate BFIs for walnuts, whereas for almonds they could be α-tocopherol and some catechin-derived metabolites. Similarly, several studies have reported a strong association between selenium levels and consumption of Brazil nuts. Intake of vegetable oils has been mainly assessed through the measurement of specific fatty acids in different blood fractions, such as oleic acid for olive oil, α-linolenic acid for flaxseed (linseed) and rapeseed (canola) oils, and linoleic acid for sunflower oil. Additionally, hydroxytyrosol and its metabolites were the most promising distinctive BFIs for (extra) virgin olive oil. However, most of these components lack sufficient specificity to serve as BFIs. Therefore, additional studies are necessary to discover new candidate BFIs, as well as to further evaluate the specificity, sensitivity, dose-response relationships, and reproducibility of these candidate biomarkers and to eventually validate them in other populations. For the discovery of new candidate BFIs, an untargeted metabolomics approach may be the most effective strategy, whereas for increasing the specificity of the evaluation of food consumption, this could be a combination of different metabolites.

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