File Download

There are no files associated with this item.

  Links for fulltext
     (May Require Subscription)
Supplementary

Book Chapter: Metabolomics

TitleMetabolomics
Authors
KeywordsChallenges of nutritional metabolomics, downstream metabolic effects of nutrition
Hypothesis confirmed, revealing mechanistically based biomarkers
Mass spectrometry in metabolomics, metabolites of high selectivity, sensitivity
Metabolic fingerprinting, spectroscopic signatures distinguishing groups
Metabolomics as a dietary tool, using metabolomic profiling
Metabolomics, analytical and profiling, INTERSALT, INTERMAP study
Metabolomics, spectroscopic signatures, annotation with metabolites
NMR and MS, dominant platforms for metabolomics
Targeted panels of metabolites, testing new hypotheses from untargeted approach
Untargeted metabolomics, seeking new hypotheses on biochemical mechanisms
Issue Date2012
Citation
Present Knowledge in Nutrition: Tenth Edition, 2012, p. 38-57 How to Cite?
AbstractAs the goal of genomics is to study all of our genes, the goal of metabolomics is to profile the entire complement of the small molecules that are involved in processes from signaling to transcription, from building proteins, to creating and shuttling energy. This chapter describes the challenges of nutritional metabolomics along with the current ways that nutrition scientists can overcome these challenges to gain more insights into the downstream metabolic effects of nutrition. Metabolomic applications in nutritional research are growing rapidly, primarily because metabolomics and nutrition address the same questions in metabolism, metabolic perturbations, oxidation, and inflammation as primary processes that maintain human health. Analytical and profiling techniques in metabolomics also are evolving rapidly, and the analytical platforms currently employed in metabolomic studies are summarized in this chapter along with the required data processing software. The examples provided in this chapter demonstrate that metabolomics is playing an increasingly important role in nutritional research, serving as a dietary assessment tool, a predictive tool for nutritional effects (nutrimetabonomics) and an epidemiological profiling tool, all of which involve gut microbial-mammalian co-metabolism. © 2012 International Life Sciences Institute.
Persistent Identifierhttp://hdl.handle.net/10722/342462

 

DC FieldValueLanguage
dc.contributor.authorO'Connell, Thomas M.-
dc.contributor.authorJia, Wei-
dc.date.accessioned2024-04-17T07:04:00Z-
dc.date.available2024-04-17T07:04:00Z-
dc.date.issued2012-
dc.identifier.citationPresent Knowledge in Nutrition: Tenth Edition, 2012, p. 38-57-
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/10722/342462-
dc.description.abstractAs the goal of genomics is to study all of our genes, the goal of metabolomics is to profile the entire complement of the small molecules that are involved in processes from signaling to transcription, from building proteins, to creating and shuttling energy. This chapter describes the challenges of nutritional metabolomics along with the current ways that nutrition scientists can overcome these challenges to gain more insights into the downstream metabolic effects of nutrition. Metabolomic applications in nutritional research are growing rapidly, primarily because metabolomics and nutrition address the same questions in metabolism, metabolic perturbations, oxidation, and inflammation as primary processes that maintain human health. Analytical and profiling techniques in metabolomics also are evolving rapidly, and the analytical platforms currently employed in metabolomic studies are summarized in this chapter along with the required data processing software. The examples provided in this chapter demonstrate that metabolomics is playing an increasingly important role in nutritional research, serving as a dietary assessment tool, a predictive tool for nutritional effects (nutrimetabonomics) and an epidemiological profiling tool, all of which involve gut microbial-mammalian co-metabolism. © 2012 International Life Sciences Institute.-
dc.languageeng-
dc.relation.ispartofPresent Knowledge in Nutrition: Tenth Edition-
dc.subjectChallenges of nutritional metabolomics, downstream metabolic effects of nutrition-
dc.subjectHypothesis confirmed, revealing mechanistically based biomarkers-
dc.subjectMass spectrometry in metabolomics, metabolites of high selectivity, sensitivity-
dc.subjectMetabolic fingerprinting, spectroscopic signatures distinguishing groups-
dc.subjectMetabolomics as a dietary tool, using metabolomic profiling-
dc.subjectMetabolomics, analytical and profiling, INTERSALT, INTERMAP study-
dc.subjectMetabolomics, spectroscopic signatures, annotation with metabolites-
dc.subjectNMR and MS, dominant platforms for metabolomics-
dc.subjectTargeted panels of metabolites, testing new hypotheses from untargeted approach-
dc.subjectUntargeted metabolomics, seeking new hypotheses on biochemical mechanisms-
dc.titleMetabolomics-
dc.typeBook_Chapter-
dc.description.naturelink_to_subscribed_fulltext-
dc.identifier.doi10.1002/9781119946045.ch4-
dc.identifier.scopuseid_2-s2.0-84886964106-
dc.identifier.spage38-
dc.identifier.epage57-

Export via OAI-PMH Interface in XML Formats


OR


Export to Other Non-XML Formats