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Research article2018Peer reviewedOpen access

Plasma metabolite profiles in healthy women differ after intervention with supplemental folic acid v. folate-rich foods

Hefni, Mohammed E.; Witthoft, Cornelia M.; Moazzami, Ali A.

Abstract

Public health authorities recommend all fertile women to increase their folate intake to 400 mu g/d by eating folate-rich foods or by taking a folic acid supplement to protect against neural tube defects. In a previous study it was shown that folate-rich foods improved folate blood status as effectively as folic acid supplementation. The aim of the present study was to investigate, using NMR metabolomics, the effects of an intervention with a synthetic folic acid supplement v. native food folate on the profile of plasma metabolites. Healthy women with normal folate status received, in parallel, 500 mu g/d synthetic folic acid from a supplement (n 18), 250 mu g/d folate from intervention foods (n 19), or no additional folate (0 mu g/d) through a portion of apple juice (n 20). The metabolic profile of plasma was measured using H-1-NMR in fasted blood drawn at baseline and after 12 weeks of intervention. Metabolic differences between the groups at baseline and after intervention were assessed using a univariate statistical approach (P <= 0.001, Bonferroni-adjusted significance level). At baseline, the groups showed no significant differences in measured metabolite concentrations. After intervention, eight metabolites, of which six (glycine, choline, betaine, formate, histidine and threonine) are related to one-carbon metabolism, were identified as discriminative metabolites. The present study suggests that different folate forms (synthetic v. natural) may affect related one-carbon metabolites differently.

Keywords

Folic acid; Folate; Dietary interventions; One-carbon metabolism; Metabolomics

Published in

Journal of nutritional science
2018, Volume: 7, article number: e32
Publisher: CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS

    UKÄ Subject classification

    Nutrition and Dietetics

    Publication identifier

    DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/jns.2018.22

    Permanent link to this page (URI)

    https://res.slu.se/id/publ/105551