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The relevance of urolithins-based metabotyping for assessing the effects of a polyphenol-rich dietary intervention on intestinal permeability: A post-hoc analysis of the MaPLE trial
Tomás Meroño, Gregorio Peron, Giorgio Gargari, Raúl González‐Domínguez, Antonio Miñarro, Esteban Vegas, Nicole Hidalgo‐Liberona, Cristian Del Bo’, Stefano Bernardi, Paul A. Kroon, Barbara Carrieri, Antonio Cherubini, Patrizia Riso, Simone Guglielmetti, Cristina Andrés‐Lacueva
Food Research International · 2022 · ▲ 24 citations
Abstract
A polyphenol-rich diet reduced intestinal permeability (IP) in older adults. Our aim was to evaluate if participants categorized according to urolithin metabotypes (UMs) exhibited different responses in the MaPLE trial. Fifty-one older adults (mean age: 78 years) completed an 8-week randomized-controlled-crossover trial comparing the effects of a polyphenol-rich vs. a control diet on IP, assessed through zonulin levels. Plasma and urinary metabolomics were evaluated with a semi-targeted UHPLC-MS/MS method. Gut microbiota was characterized by 16S rRNA gene profiling. UMs were determined according to urolithin excretion in 24 h urine samples. Multivariate statistics were used to characterize the differences in metabolomic and metataxonomic responses across UMs. Thirty-three participants were classified as urolithin metabotype A (UMA), 13 as urolithin metabotype B (UMB), and 5 as urolithin metabotype 0 (UM0) according to their urinary excretion of urolithins. Clinical, dietary, and biochemical characteristics at baseline were similar between UMs (all p > 0.05). After the polyphenol-rich diet, UMB vs. UMA participants showed a 2-fold higher improvement of zonulin levels (p for interaction = 0.033). Moreover, UMB vs. UMA participants were characterized for alterations in fatty acid metabolism, kynurenine pathway of tryptophan catabolism, and microbial metabolization of phenolic acids. These changes were correlated with the reduction of zonulin levels and modifications of gut microbes (increased Clostridiales, including, R. lactaris, and G. formicilis). In conclusion, urolithin-based metabotyping identified older adults with a higher improvement of IP after a polyphenol-rich diet. Our results reinforce the concept that UMs may contribute to tailor personalized nutrition interventions.
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- 10.1016/j.foodres.2022.111632
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- 2026-06-26 MST
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APA
Meroño, T., Peron, G., Gargari, G., González‐Domínguez, R., Miñarro, A., Vegas, E., Hidalgo‐Liberona, N., Bo’, C.D., Bernardi, S., Kroon, P.A., Carrieri, B., Cherubini, A., Riso, P., Guglielmetti, S., & Andrés‐Lacueva, C. (2022). The relevance of urolithins-based metabotyping for assessing the effects of a polyphenol-rich dietary intervention on intestinal permeability: A post-hoc analysis of the MaPLE trial. <em>Food Research International</em>. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.foodres.2022.111632
Vancouver
Meroño T, Peron G, Gargari G, González‐Domínguez R, Miñarro A, Vegas E, et al. The relevance of urolithins-based metabotyping for assessing the effects of a polyphenol-rich dietary intervention on intestinal permeability: A post-hoc analysis of the MaPLE trial. Food Research International. 2022. doi:10.1016/j.foodres.2022.111632.
BibTeX
@article{toms2022Therel,
title = {The relevance of urolithins-based metabotyping for assessing the effects of a polyphenol-rich dietary intervention on intestinal permeability: A post-hoc analysis of the MaPLE trial},
author = {Tomás Meroño and Gregorio Peron and Giorgio Gargari and Raúl González‐Domínguez and Antonio Miñarro and Esteban Vegas and Nicole Hidalgo‐Liberona and Cristian Del Bo’ and Stefano Bernardi and Paul A. Kroon and Barbara Carrieri and Antonio Cherubini and Patrizia Riso and Simone Guglielmetti and Cristina Andrés‐Lacueva},
journal = {Food Research International},
year = {2022},
doi = {10.1016/j.foodres.2022.111632},
}
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