Sources of Variation in Food-Related Metabolites during Pregnancy

Author:

Rafiq TalhaORCID,Azab Sandi M.,Anand Sonia S.,Thabane Lehana,Shanmuganathan Meera,Morrison Katherine M.,Atkinson Stephanie A.ORCID,Stearns Jennifer C.ORCID,Teo Koon K.,Britz-McKibbin PhilipORCID,de Souza Russell J.ORCID

Abstract

The extent to which variation in food-related metabolites are attributable to non-dietary factors remains unclear, which may explain inconsistent food-metabolite associations observed in population studies. This study examined the association between non-dietary factors and the serum concentrations of food-related biomarkers and quantified the amount of variability in metabolite concentrations explained by non-dietary factors. Pregnant women (n = 600) from two Canadian birth cohorts completed a validated semi-quantitative food frequency questionnaire, and serum metabolites were measured by multisegment injection-capillary electrophoresis-mass spectrometry. Hierarchical linear modelling and principal component partial R-square (PC-PR2) were used for data analysis. For proline betaine and DHA (mainly exogenous), citrus foods and fish/fish oil intake, respectively, explained the highest proportion of variability relative to non-dietary factors. The unique contribution of dietary factors was similar (15:0, 17:0, hippuric acid, TMAO) or lower (14:0, tryptophan betaine, 3-methylhistidine, carnitine) compared to non-dietary factors (i.e., ethnicity, maternal age, gestational age, pre-pregnancy BMI, physical activity, and smoking) for metabolites that can either be produced endogenously, biotransformed by gut microbiota, and/or derived from multiple food sources. The results emphasize the importance of adjusting for non-dietary factors in future analyses to improve the accuracy and precision of the measures of food intake and their associations with health and disease.

Funder

Canadian Institutes of Health Research

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Food Science,Nutrition and Dietetics

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