Postprandial Metabolic Effects of Fiber Mixes Revealed by in vivo Stable Isotope Labeling in Humans.
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Authors
Schlicker, LisaBoers, Hanny M
Dudek, Christian-Alexander
Zhao, Gang
Barua, Arnab
Trezzi, Jean-Pierre
Meyer-Hermann, Michael
Jacobs, Doris M
Hiller, Karsten
Issue Date
2019-05-07
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Food supplementation with a fiber mix of guar gum and chickpea flour represents a promising approach to reduce the risk of type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) by attenuating postprandial glycemia. To investigate the effects on postprandial metabolic fluxes of glucose-derived metabolites in response to this fiber mix, a randomized, cross-over study was designed. Twelve healthy, male subjects consumed three different flatbreads either supplemented with 2% guar gum or 4% guar gum and 15% chickpea flour or without supplementation (control). The flatbreads were enriched with ~2% of 13C-labeled wheat flour. Blood was collected at 16 intervals over a period of 360 min after bread intake and plasma samples were analyzed by GC-MS based metabolite profiling combined with stable isotope-assisted metabolomics. Although metabolite levels of the downstream metabolites of glucose, specifically lactate and alanine, were not altered in response to the fiber mix, supplementation of 4% guar gum was shown to significantly delay and reduce the exogenous formation of these metabolites. Metabolic modeling and computation of appearance rates revealed that the effects induced by the fiber mix were strongest for glucose and attenuated downstream of glucose. Further investigations to explore the potential of fiber mix supplementation to counteract the development of metabolic diseases are warranted.Citation
Metabolites. 2019 May 7;9(5). pii: metabo9050091. doi: 10.3390/metabo9050091.Affiliation
BRICS, Braunschweiger Zentrum für Systembiologie, Rebenring 56,38106 Braunschweig, Germany.Publisher
MPDIJournal
MetabolitesPubMed ID
31067731Type
ArticleLanguage
enISSN
2218-1989ae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.3390/metabo9050091
Scopus Count
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- Creative Commons
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