A1 Refereed original research article in a scientific journal

Sex and puberty-related differences in metabolomic profiles associated with adiposity measures in youth with obesity




AuthorsChristoph Saner, Brooke E. Harcourt, Ahwan Pandey, Susan Ellul, Zoe McCallum, Kung-Ting Kao, Celia Twindyakirana, Anke Pons, Erin J. Alexander, Richard Saffery, David P. Burgner, Markus Juonala, Matthew A. Sabin

PublisherSPRINGER

Publication year2019

JournalMetabolomics

Journal name in sourceMETABOLOMICS

Journal acronymMETABOLOMICS

Article numberARTN 75

Volume15

Issue5

Number of pages11

ISSN1573-3882

eISSN1573-3890

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1007/s11306-019-1537-y

Self-archived copy’s web addresshttps://research.utu.fi/converis/portal/detail/Publication/40343439


Abstract

Background

Specific patterns of metabolomic profiles relating to cardiometabolic disease are associated with increased weight in adults. In youth with obesity, metabolomic data are sparse and associations with adiposity measures unknown.

Objectives

Primary, to determine associations between adiposity measures and metabolomic profiles with increased cardiometabolic risks in youth with obesity. Secondary, to stratify associations by sex and puberty.

Methods

Participants were from COBRA (Childhood Overweight BioRepository of Australia; a paediatric cohort with obesity). Adiposity measures (BMI, BMI z-score, %truncal and %whole body fat, waist circumference and waist/height ratio), puberty staging and NMR metabolomic profiles from serum were assessed. Statistics included multivariate analysis (principal component analysis, PCA) and multiple linear regression models with false discovery rate adjustment.

Results

214 participants had metabolomic profiles analyzed, mean age 11.9years (SD3.1), mean BMI z-score 2.49 (SD +/- 0.24), 53% females. Unsupervised PCA identified no separable clusters of individuals. Positive associations included BMI z-score and phenylalanine, total body fat % and lipids in medium HDL, and waist circumference and tyrosine; negative associations included total body fat % and the ratio of docosahexaenoic acid/total fatty acids and histidine. Stratifying by sex and puberty, patterns of associations with BMI z-score in post-pubertal males included positive associations with lipid-, cholesterol- and triglyceride-content in VLDL lipoproteins; total fatty acids; total triglycerides; isoleucine, leucine and glycoprotein acetyls.

Conclusion

In a paediatric cohort with obesity, increased adiposity measures, especially in post-pubertal males, were associated with distinct patterns in metabolomic profiles.


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Last updated on 2024-26-11 at 22:45