Project Details
Description
Abstract:
One potential mechanism through which plant-rich diets reduce chronic disease risk is their high polyphenol
content, with flavonoids as the most abundant type, constituting approximately two-thirds of polyphenol intake.
Substantial evidence suggests dietary flavonoids play a crucial role in cardiometabolic disease prevention due
to their anti-inflammatory and antioxidant effects. However, accurately measuring adherence to a flavonoid-rich
eating pattern remains challenging due to limited methods for precise intake assessment. This application aims
to identify and validate flavonoid metabolites, particularly those related to carbonyl and oxidative stress, as
biomarkers of plant-rich diets through a randomized crossover trial and comprehensive profiling of urinary
flavonoid metabolites in cohorts with cardiovascular disease (CVD) outcomes. Specific Aim 1 will assess the
dose- and time-dependent formation of flavonoid biomarkers in urine and blood from a randomized crossover
trial of low- and high-flavonoid diets among healthy individuals (n=36), using LCMS-based targeted
metabolomics to evaluate urinary and plasma flavonoid metabolites, including novel reactive carbonyl species
(RCS) conjugated and oxidized flavonoid metabolites. We will investigate whether a flavonoid-rich diet reduces
carbonyl stress, measured by RCS and advanced glycation end products (AGEs). Specific Aim 2 involves
comprehensive profiling of urinary flavonoid metabolites, utilizing an in-house LCMS database of major dietary
flavonoids and new metabolites (~250 compounds), to examine relationships between flavonoid metabolites,
carbonyl and oxidative stress biomarkers (RCS and AGEs), and CVD risk among 500 case-control pairs in the
Nurses’ Health Study (NHS), 300 pairs in the Hispanic Community Health Study/Study of Latinos (SOL), and
170 pairs of African Americans in the Southern Community Cohort Study (SCCS). We hypothesize that inverse
associations between urinary flavonoid biomarkers and CVD risk are partly mediated by RCS and AGEs.
These aims are supported by preliminary data from an acute study on RCS-flavonoid conjugate kinetics after
consuming flavonoid-rich foods (green tea, soy milk, blueberry) and pilot studies showing our capability to
identify urinary biomarkers of flavonoid intake in free-living populations. This project significantly advances
precision nutrition by integrating controlled trials with large, diverse cohorts, bridging nutritional epidemiology
with cutting-edge metabolomics and CVD biomarkers. One of its novel aspects is the use of a controlled
feeding trial to investigate the time- and dose-dependent formation of novel metabolites linked to carbonyl and
oxidative stress in response to a high flavonoid diet. By emphasizing overall dietary patterns over individual
foods, the project contributes to the formulation of practical dietary guidelines. The inclusion of the SOL and
SCCS enhances the racial and ethnic diversity of our study participants, which is crucial for developing
effective dietary interventions tailored to the high-risk minority groups.
| Status | Active |
|---|---|
| Effective start/end date | 9/15/25 → 6/30/26 |
Funding
- National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute: $733,785.00
Fingerprint
Explore the research topics touched on by this project. These labels are generated based on the underlying awards/grants. Together they form a unique fingerprint.