Quantitative Dietary Fingerprinting (QDF)-A Novel Tool for Comprehensive Dietary Assessment Based on Urinary Nutrimetabolomics.
Raúl González-DomínguezMireia Urpi-SardaOlga JáureguiPaul W NeedsPaul Antony KroonCristina Andrés-LacuevaPublished in: Journal of agricultural and food chemistry (2019)
Accurate dietary assessment is a challenge in nutritional research, needing powerful and robust tools for reliable measurement of food intake biomarkers. In this work, we have developed a novel quantitative dietary fingerprinting (QDF) approach, which enables for the first time the simultaneous quantitation of about 350 urinary food-derived metabolites, including (poly)phenolic aglycones, phase II metabolites, and microbial-transformed compounds, as well as other compounds (e.g., glucosinolates, amino acid derivatives, methylxanthines, alkaloids, and markers of alcohol and tobacco consumption). This method was fully validated for 220 metabolites, yielding good linearity, high sensitivity and precision, accurate recovery rates, and negligible matrix effects. Furthermore, 127 additional phase II metabolites were also included in this method after identification in urines collected from acute dietary interventions with various foods. Thus, this metabolomic approach represents one-step further toward precision nutrition and the objective of improving the accurateness and comprehensiveness in the assessment of dietary patterns and lifestyles.
Keyphrases
- phase ii
- ms ms
- clinical trial
- open label
- high resolution
- physical activity
- amino acid
- phase iii
- mass spectrometry
- microbial community
- liver failure
- high performance liquid chromatography
- climate change
- placebo controlled
- human health
- solid phase extraction
- aortic dissection
- drug induced
- tandem mass spectrometry
- extracorporeal membrane oxygenation