School of Biological Sciences, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, UT 84112;
Global Change and Sustainability Center, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, UT 84112.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2020 Aug 18;117(33):20044-20051. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1914087117. Epub 2020 Aug 3.
Carbon and nitrogen isotope ratios in hair sampled from 65 communities across the central and intermountain regions of the United States and more intensively throughout 29 ZIP codes in the Salt Lake Valley, Utah, revealed a dietary divergence related to socioeconomic status as measured by cost of living, household income, and adjusted gross income. Corn-fed, animal-derived proteins were more common in the diets of lower socioeconomic status populations than were plant-derived proteins, with individual estimates of animal-derived protein diets as high as 75%; United States towns and cities averaged 57%. Similar patterns were seen across the socioeconomic status spectrum in the Salt Lake Valley. It is likely that corn-fed animal proteins were associated with concentrated animal-feeding operations, a common practice for industrial animal production in the United States today. Given recent studies highlighting the negative impacts of animal-derived proteins in our diets, hair carbon isotope ratios could provide an approach for scaling assessments of animal-sourced foods and health risks in communities across the United States.
从美国中部和山区的 65 个社区以及犹他州盐湖谷的 29 个邮政编码更密集地采集的头发中的碳和氮同位素比率显示,与生活成本、家庭收入和调整后总收入等社会经济地位衡量标准相关的饮食差异。在社会经济地位较低的人群中,玉米喂养的动物源性蛋白质比植物源性蛋白质更为常见,动物源性蛋白质饮食的个别估计高达 75%;美国城镇的平均水平为 57%。在盐湖谷的整个社会经济地位范围内都可以看到类似的模式。玉米喂养的动物蛋白可能与集中式动物饲养场有关,这是当今美国工业化动物生产的常见做法。鉴于最近的研究强调了饮食中动物源性蛋白质的负面影响,头发中的碳同位素比率可以为评估美国各地社区的动物源性食物和健康风险提供一种方法。