Four features of temporal patterns characterize similarity among individuals and molecules by glucose ingestion in humans

Author:

Fujita SuguruORCID,Karasawa Yasuaki,Fujii MasashiORCID,Hironaka Ken-ichiORCID,Uda ShinsukeORCID,Kubota Hiroyuki,Inoue Hiroshi,Sumitomo Yohei,Hirayama AkiyoshiORCID,Soga TomoyoshiORCID,Kuroda ShinyaORCID

Abstract

AbstractOral glucose ingestion induces systemic changes of many blood metabolites related not only to glucose, but also other metabolites such as amino acids and lipids through many blood hormones. However, the detailed temporal changes in the concentrations of comprehensive metabolites and hormones over a long time by oral glucose ingestion are uncharacterized. We measured 83 metabolites and 7 hormones in 20 healthy human subjects in response to glucose ingestion. We characterized temporal patterns of blood molecules by four features: (i) the decomposability into “amplitude” and “rate” components, (ii) the similarity of temporal patterns among individuals, (iii) the relation of molecules over time among individuals, and (iv) the similarity of temporal patterns among molecules. Glucose and glucose metabolism-related hormones indicated a rapid increase, and citrulline and lipids, which indicated a rapid decrease, returned to fasting levels faster than amino acids. Compared to glucose metabolism-related molecules and lipids, amino acids showed similar temporal patterns among individuals. The four features of temporal patterns of blood molecules by oral glucose ingestion characterize the differences among individuals and among molecules.

Funder

MEXT | JST | Core Research for Evolutional Science and Technology

MEXT | Japan Science and Technology Agency

Japan Agency for Medical Research and Development

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Applied Mathematics,Computer Science Applications,Drug Discovery,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,Modeling and Simulation

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