Nutrimetabolomics fingerprinting to identify biomarkers of bread exposure in a free-living population from the PREDIMED study cohort

Author

Garcia Aloy, Mar

Llorach, Rafael

Urpí Sardà, Mireia

Tulipani, Sara

Salas Salvadó, Jordi

Martínez-González, Miguel Ángel, 1957-

Corella Piquer, Dolores

Fitó Colomer, Montserrat

Estruch Riba, Ramon

Serra Majem, Lluís

Andrés Lacueva, Ma. Cristina

Publication date

2015-02-23T15:10:52Z

2015-06-28T22:01:36Z

2014-06-28

2015-02-23T15:10:52Z



Abstract

Bread is one of the most widely consumed foods. Its impact on human health is currently of special interest for researchers. We aimed to identify biomarkers of bread consumption by applying a nutrimetabolomic approach to a free-living population. An untargeted HPLC <br>q-TOF-MS and multivariate analysis was applied to human urine from 155 subjects stratified by habitual bread consumption in three groups: non-consumers of bread (n = 56), white-bread consumers (n = 48) and whole-grain bread consumers (n = 51). The most differential metabolites (variable importance for projection ≥1.5) included compounds originating from cereal plant phytochemicals such as benzoxazinoids and alkylresorcinol metabolites, and compounds produced by gut microbiota (such as enterolactones, hydroxybenzoic and dihydroferulic acid metabolites). Pyrraline, riboflavin, 3-indolecarboxylic acid glucuronide, 2,8-dihydroxyquinoline glucuronide and N-α-acetylcitrulline were also tentatively identified. In order to combine multiple metabolites in a model to predict bread consumption, a stepwise logistic regression analysis was used. Receiver operating curves were constructed to evaluate the global performance of individual metabolites and their combination. The area under the curve values [AUC (95 % CI)] of combined models ranged from 77.8 % (69.1 <br>86.4 %) to 93.7 % (89.4 <br>98.1 %), whereas the AUC for the metabolites included in the models had weak values when they were evaluated individually: from 58.1 % (46.6 <br>69.7 %) to 78.4 % (69.8 <br>87.1 %). Our study showed that a daily bread intake significantly impacted on the urinary metabolome, despite being examined under uncontrolled free-living conditions. We further concluded that a combination of several biomarkers of exposure is better than a single biomarker for the predictive ability of discriminative analysis.

Document Type

Article
Accepted version

Language

English

Subjects and keywords

Metabòlits; Nutrició; Marcadors bioquímics; Pa; Consum d'aliments; Cromatografia de líquids d'alta resolució; Espectrometria de masses; Metabolites; Nutrition; Biochemical markers; Bread; Food consumption; High performance liquid chromatography; Mass spectrometry

Publisher

Springer Science + Business Media

Related items

Versió postprint del document publicat a: http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11306-014-0682-6

Metabolomics, 2015, vol. 11, num. 1, p. 155-165

http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11306-014-0682-6

Rights

(c) Springer Science + Business Media, 2015

This item appears in the following Collection(s)