Measurement of dietary exposure: a challenging problem which may be overcome thanks to metabolomics?
Open Access
- 2 April 2009
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Springer Nature in Genes & Nutrition
- Vol. 4 (2) , 135-141
- https://doi.org/10.1007/s12263-009-0120-y
Abstract
The diet is an important environmental exposure, and its measurement is an essential component of much health-related research. However, conventional tools for measuring dietary exposure have significant limitations being subject to an unknown degree of misreporting and dependent upon food composition tables to allow estimation of intakes of energy, nutrients and non-nutrient food constituents. In addition, such tools may be inappropriate for use with certain groups of people. As an alternative approach, the recent techniques of metabolite profiling or fingerprinting, which allows simultaneous monitoring of multiple and dynamic components of biological fluids, may provide metabolic signals indicative of food intake. Samples can be analysed through numerous analytical platforms, followed by multivariate data analysis. In humans, metabolomics has been applied successfully in pharmacology, toxicology and medical screening, but nutritional metabolomics is still in its infancy. Biomarkers of a small number of specific foods and nutrients have been developed successfully but less targeted and more high-throughput methods, that do not need prior knowledge of which signals might be discriminatory, and which may allow a more global characterisation of dietary intake, remain to be tested. A proof a principle project (the MEDE Study) is currently underway in our laboratories to test the hypothesis that high-throughput, non-targeted metabolite fingerprinting using flow injection electrospray mass spectrometry can be applied to human biofluids (blood and urine) to characterise dietary exposure in humans.Keywords
This publication has 68 references indexed in Scilit:
- No evidence of association between breast cancer risk and dietary carotenoids, retinols, vitamin C and tocopherols in Southwestern Hispanic and non-Hispanic White womenBreast Cancer Research and Treatment, 2008
- Rice blast infection of Brachypodium distachyon as a model system to study dynamic host/pathogen interactionsNature Protocols, 2008
- Preprocessing, classification modeling and feature selection using flow injection electrospray mass spectrometry metabolite fingerprint dataNature Protocols, 2008
- Metabolic assessment—a key to nutritional strategies for healthTrends in Food Science & Technology, 2004
- Metabonomics, dietary influences and cultural differences: a 1H NMR-based study of urine samples obtained from healthy British and Swedish subjectsJournal of Pharmaceutical and Biomedical Analysis, 2004
- NMR-based metabonomic toxicity classification: hierarchical cluster analysis and k-nearest-neighbour approachesAnalytica Chimica Acta, 2003
- Nontargeted Metabolome Analysis by Use of Fourier Transform Ion Cyclotron Mass SpectrometryOMICS: A Journal of Integrative Biology, 2002
- Metabonomics: a platform for studying drug toxicity and gene functionNature Reviews Drug Discovery, 2002
- Validity of self-reported energy intake in lean and obese young women, using two nutrient databases, compared with total energy expenditure assessed by doubly labeled waterEuropean Journal of Clinical Nutrition, 2001
- Using direct electrospray mass spectrometry in taxonomy and secondary metabolite profiling of crude fungal extractsJournal of Microbiological Methods, 1996