Plasma Metabolomics Profiles are Associated with the Amount and Source of Protein Intake: A Metabolomics Approach within the PREDIMED Study — Pablo Hernández‐Alonso (2020) | RDL Network
Plasma Metabolomics Profiles are Associated with the Amount and Source of Protein Intake: A Metabolomics Approach within the PREDIMED Study
Article 2020 en
Authors
PH
Pablo Hernández‐Alonso
NB
Nerea Becerra‐Tomás
CP
Christopher Papandreou
Abstract
1 min read
Scope The plasma metabolomics profiles of protein intake have been rarely investigated. The aim is to identify the distinct plasma metabolomics profiles associated with overall intakes of protein as well as with intakes from animal and plant protein sources. Methods and results A cross‐sectional analysis using data from 1833 participants at high risk of cardiovascular disease is conducted. Associations between 385 identified metabolites and the intake of total, animal protein (AP), and plant protein (PP), and plant‐to‐animal ratio (PR) are assessed using elastic net continuous regression analyses. A double 10‐cross‐validation (CV) procedure is used and Pearson correlations coefficients between multi‐metabolite weighted models and reported protein intake in each pair of training‐validation datasets are calculated. A wide set of metabolites is consistently associated with each protein source evaluated. These metabolites mainly consisted of amino acids and their derivatives, acylcarnitines, different organic acids, and lipid species. Few metabolites overlapped among protein sources (i.e., C14:0 SM, C20:4 carnitine, GABA, and allantoin) but none of them toward the same direction. Regarding AP and PP approaches, C20:4 carnitine and dimethylglycine are positively associated with PP but negatively associated with AP. However, allantoin, C14:0 SM, C38:7 PE plasmalogen, GABA, metronidazole, and trigonelline (N‐methylnicotinate) behave contrarily. Ten‐CV Pearson correlation coefficients between self‐reported protein intake and plasma metabolomics profiles range from 0.21 for PR to 0.32 for total protein. Conclusions Different sets of metabolites are associated with total, animal, and plant protein intake. Further studies are needed to assess the contribution of these metabolites in protein biomarkers’ discovery and prediction of cardiometabolic alterations.
Pablo Hernández‐Alonso, Christopher Papandreou, Mònica Bulló, Miguel Ruiz‐Canela, Courtney Dennis, Amy Deik, Dong D. Wang, Marta Guasch‐Ferré, Edward Yu, Estefanía Toledo, Cristina Razquín, Dolores Corella, Ramón Estruch, Emilio Ros, Montserrat Fitó, Fernando Arós, Miquel Fiol, Lluís Serra‐Majem, Liming Liang, Clary B. Clish, Miguel Ángel Martínez‐González, Frank B Hu, Jordi Salas‐Salvadó
Christopher Papandreou, Pablo Hernández‐Alonso, Mònica Bulló, Miguel Ruiz‐Canela, Edward Yu, Marta Guasch‐Ferré, Estefanía Toledo, Courtney Dennis, Amy Deik, Clary B. Clish, Cristina Razquín, Dolores Corella, Ramón Estruch, Emilio Ros, Montserrat Fitó, Fernando Arós, Miquel Fiol, José Lapetra, Cristina Ruano, Liming Liang, Miguel Ángel Martínez‐González, Frank B Hu, Jordi Salas‐Salvadó
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