Genes & Nutrition
Food intake biomarkers for apple, pear, and stone fruit
- Marynka Ulaszewska†,
- Natalia Vázquez-Manjarrez†,
- Mar Garcia-Aloy,
- Rafael Llorach,
- Fulvio Mattivi,
- Lars O. Dragsted,
- Giulia Praticò and
- Claudine Manach
†Contributed equally
- Received: 31 May 2018
- Accepted: 6 November 2018
- Published: 29 November 2018
Abstract
Fruit is a key component of a healthy diet. However, it is still not clear whether some classes of fruit may be more beneficial than others and whether all individuals whatever their age, gender, health status, genotype, or gut microbiota composition respond in the same way to fruit consumption. Such questions require further observational and intervention studies in which the intake of a specific fruit can be precisely assessed at the population and individual levels. Within the Food Biomarker Alliance Project (FoodBAll Project) under the Joint Programming Initiative “A Healthy Diet for a Healthy Life”, an ambitious action was undertaken aiming at reviewing existent literature in a systematic way to identify validated and promising biomarkers of intake for all major food groups, including fruits. This paper belongs to a series of reviews following the same BFIRev protocol and is focusing on biomarkers of pome and stone fruit intake. Selected candidate biomarkers extracted from the literature search went through a validation process specifically developed for food intake biomarkers.
Keywords
- Apple
- Pear
- Quince
- Pome fruit
- Stone fruit
- Cherry
- Plum
- Prune
- Apricot
- Peach
- Nectarine
- Biomarkers
- Intake
No hay comentarios:
Publicar un comentario