Nutritional supplementation alters associations between one-carbon metabolites and cardiometabolic risk profiles in older adults: a secondary analysis of the Vienna Active Ageing Study.
Nicola A GilliesBernhard FranzkeBarbara WessnerBarbara Schober-HalperMarlene HofmannStefan OesenAnela TosevskaEva-Maria StrasserNicole C RoyAmber M MilanDavid Cameron-SmithKarl-Heinz WagnerPublished in: European journal of nutrition (2021)
Choline metabolites, including choline, betaine and dimethylglycine, were central to the co-regulation of 1C metabolism and cardiometabolic health in older adults. Metabolites that indicate upregulated betaine-dependent homocysteine remethylation were elevated in those with the greatest cardiometabolic risk at baseline, but associated with improvements in lipid parameters following resistance training with nutritional supplementation. The relevance of how 1C metabolite status might be optimised to protect against cardiometabolic dysregulation requires further attention.