Wilkinson Michael J, Yai Youlim, O'Brien Diane M
Center for Alaska Native Health Research, Institute of Arctic Biology, University of Alaska, Fairbanks 99775-7000, USA.
Int J Circumpolar Health. 2007 Feb;66(1):31-41. doi: 10.3402/ijch.v66i1.18222.
A significant fraction of the Alaska Native population appears to be shifting from a primarily subsistence-based diet to a market-based diet; therefore, the ability to link diet pattern to disease risk has become increasingly important to predicting public health needs. Our research aims to develop the use of stable isotope ratios as diet pattern biomarkers, based on naturally-occurring isotopic differences in the elemental composition of subsistence and non-subsistence foods. These differences are reflected in human blood, hair and fingernail isotope signatures.
In this preliminary study, we investigate the potential for 13C and 15N to serve as dietary biomarkers for age-related dietary differences in a subset of participants involved with a long-term study initiated by the Center for Alaska Native Health Research (CANHR) at the University of Alaska Fairbanks (UAF).
We measured delta13C and delta15N in red blood cells collected from 12 "elder" participants (age 60+ yrs) and 14 younger participants (age 14-19 yrs). Samples were evenly divided between males and females, and between two villages sampled in 2004. We also sampled market and subsistence foods in Fairbanks, AK, as an indicator of the isotopic differences likely to be observed in village foods.
Elders were significantly enriched in 15N, but depleted in 13C, relative to younger participants. These differences are consistent with increased intake of marine subsistence in elders, and of certain market foods in younger participants. However, elders were considerably more variable in delta15N, suggesting greater differences among individuals in their usual intake.
Overall we find that RBC stable isotope signatures exhibit variation consistent with previously documented dietary patterns in Alaska Natives, and we describe future directions for developing these biomarkers for diet pattern monitoring.
阿拉斯加原住民中相当一部分人似乎正从主要基于自给自足的饮食转向基于市场的饮食;因此,将饮食模式与疾病风险联系起来的能力对于预测公共卫生需求变得越来越重要。我们的研究旨在基于自给自足和非自给自足食物元素组成中自然存在的同位素差异,开发将稳定同位素比率用作饮食模式生物标志物的方法。这些差异反映在人体血液、头发和指甲的同位素特征中。
在这项初步研究中,我们调查了参与阿拉斯加费尔班克斯大学(UAF)阿拉斯加原住民健康研究中心(CANHR)发起的一项长期研究的部分参与者中,碳-13(13C)和氮-15(15N)作为与年龄相关饮食差异的膳食生物标志物的潜力。
我们测量了从12名“老年”参与者(60岁及以上)和14名年轻参与者(14 - 19岁)采集的红细胞中的δ13C和δ15N。样本在男性和女性之间以及2004年抽样的两个村庄之间平均分配。我们还在阿拉斯加费尔班克斯采集了市场食物和自给自足食物样本,作为村庄食物中可能观察到的同位素差异的指标。
相对于年轻参与者,老年人的15N显著富集,但13C depleted。这些差异与老年人海洋自给食物摄入量增加以及年轻参与者某些市场食物摄入量增加一致。然而,老年人的δ15N变化大得多,表明个体之间日常摄入量的差异更大。
总体而言,我们发现红细胞稳定同位素特征呈现出与阿拉斯加原住民先前记录的饮食模式一致的变化,并且我们描述了开发这些用于饮食模式监测的生物标志物的未来方向。