Skip to content
Open access · CC-BY via OpenAlex

Metabolomic Analysis Reveals Extended Metabolic Consequences of Marginal Vitamin B-6 Deficiency in Healthy Human Subjects

Jesse F. Gregory, Youngja Park, Yvonne Lamers, Nirmalya Bandyopadhyay, Yueh-Yun Chi, Kichen Lee, Steven Kim, Vanessa da Silva Corralo, Nikolas Kühn Hove, Sanjay Ranka, Tamer Kahveci, Keith E. Muller, Robert Stevens, Christopher B. Newgard, Peter W. Stacpoole

PLoS ONE · 2013 · ▲ 57 citations

Abstract

Marginal deficiency of vitamin B-6 is common among segments of the population worldwide. Because pyridoxal 5'-phosphate (PLP) serves as a coenzyme in the metabolism of amino acids, carbohydrates, organic acids, and neurotransmitters, as well as in aspects of one-carbon metabolism, vitamin B-6 deficiency could have many effects. Healthy men and women (age: 20-40 y; n = 23) were fed a 2-day controlled, nutritionally adequate diet followed by a 28-day low-vitamin B-6 diet (<0.5 mg/d) to induce marginal deficiency, as reflected by a decline of plasma PLP from 52.6±14.1 (mean ± SD) to 21.5±4.6 nmol/L (P<0.0001) and increased cystathionine from 131±65 to 199±56 nmol/L (P<0.001). Fasting plasma samples obtained before and after vitamin B6 restriction were analyzed by (1)H-NMR with and without filtration and by targeted quantitative analysis by mass spectrometry (MS). Multilevel partial least squares-discriminant analysis and S-plots of NMR spectra showed that NMR is effective in classifying samples according to vitamin B-6 status and identified discriminating features. NMR spectral features of selected metabolites indicated that vitamin B-6 restriction significantly increased the ratios of glutamine/glutamate and 2-oxoglutarate/glutamate (P<0.001) and tended to increase concentrations of acetate, pyruvate, and trimethylamine-N-oxide (adjusted P<0.05). Tandem MS showed significantly greater plasma proline after vitamin B-6 restriction (adjusted P<0.05), but there were no effects on the profile of 14 other amino acids and 45 acylcarnitines. These findings demonstrate that marginal vitamin B-6 deficiency has widespread metabolic perturbations and illustrate the utility of metabolomics in evaluating complex effects of altered vitamin B-6 intake.

◌ CITATION ONLY
Full text is not openly licensed for redistribution here. Read it at the source:

Read at source →

Provenance

Source
OpenAlex
DOI
10.1371/journal.pone.0063544
Canonical
link ↗
Fetched
2026-06-23 MST

Cite this

APA
Gregory, J.F., Park, Y., Lamers, Y., Bandyopadhyay, N., Chi, Y., Lee, K., Kim, S., Corralo, V.D.S., Hove, N.K., Ranka, S., Kahveci, T., Muller, K.E., Stevens, R., Newgard, C.B., Stacpoole, P.W., &amp; Jones, D.P. (2013). Metabolomic Analysis Reveals Extended Metabolic Consequences of Marginal Vitamin B-6 Deficiency in Healthy Human Subjects. <em>PLoS ONE</em>. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0063544
Vancouver
Gregory JF, Park Y, Lamers Y, Bandyopadhyay N, Chi Y, Lee K, et al. Metabolomic Analysis Reveals Extended Metabolic Consequences of Marginal Vitamin B-6 Deficiency in Healthy Human Subjects. PLoS ONE. 2013. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0063544.
BibTeX
@article{jesse2013Metabo, title = {Metabolomic Analysis Reveals Extended Metabolic Consequences of Marginal Vitamin B-6 Deficiency in Healthy Human Subjects}, author = {Jesse F. Gregory and Youngja Park and Yvonne Lamers and Nirmalya Bandyopadhyay and Yueh-Yun Chi and Kichen Lee and Steven Kim and Vanessa da Silva Corralo and Nikolas Kühn Hove and Sanjay Ranka and Tamer Kahveci and Keith E. Muller and Robert Stevens and Christopher B. Newgard and Peter W. Stacpoole and Dean P. Jones}, journal = {PLoS ONE}, year = {2013}, doi = {10.1371/journal.pone.0063544}, }

Research neighborhood

References, citing works, and semantically nearest findings. Click a node to open it.

Related findings