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Urinary N-methylnicotinamide and β-aminoisobutyric acid predict catch-up growth in undernourished Brazilian children

Urinary N-methylnicotinamide and β-aminoisobutyric acid predict catch-up growth in undernourished Brazilian children
Urinary N-methylnicotinamide and β-aminoisobutyric acid predict catch-up growth in undernourished Brazilian children

Enteric infections, enteropathy and undernutrition in early childhood are preventable risk factors for child deaths, impaired neurodevelopment, and later life metabolic diseases. However, the mechanisms linking these exposures and outcomes remain to be elucidated, as do biomarkers for identifying children at risk. By examining the urinary metabolic phenotypes of nourished and undernourished children participating in a case-control study in Semi-Arid Brazil, we identified key differences with potential relevance to mechanisms, biomarkers and outcomes. Undernutrition was found to perturb several biochemical pathways, including choline and tryptophan metabolism, while also increasing the proteolytic activity of the gut microbiome. Furthermore, a metabolic adaptation was observed in the undernourished children to reduce energy expenditure, reflected by increased N-methylnicotinamide and reduced β-aminoisobutyric acid excretion. Interestingly, accelerated catch-up growth was observed in those undernourished children displaying a more robust metabolic adaptation several months earlier. Hence, urinary N-methylnicotinamide and β-aminoisobutyric acid represent promising biomarkers for predicting short-term growth outcomes in undernourished children and for identifying children destined for further growth shortfalls. These findings have important implications for understanding contributors to long-term sequelae of early undernutrition, including cognitive, growth, and metabolic functions.

Aminoisobutyric Acids/urine, Brazil, Child Development, Child, Preschool, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Infant, Infant Nutrition Disorders/physiopathology, Male, Malnutrition/physiopathology, Niacinamide/analogs & derivatives, Retrospective Studies
2045-2322
1-9
Mayneris-Perxachs, Jordi
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Lima, Aldo A.M.
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Guerrant, Richard L.
b8c9324a-fd9b-401e-b994-105406ee8fbd
Leite, Álvaro M.
e99be6a5-0049-4ede-a919-34456fbbe7d0
Moura, Alessandra F.
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Lima, Noélia L.
4e3f57bc-1028-4520-b7c9-f43097c9ecbc
Soares, Alberto M.
46b11d59-378a-476c-97b1-c6998ea3e6a8
Havt, Alexandre
ab697186-00eb-4d2c-9f77-9079240bee46
Moore, Sean R.
2336a178-2f26-416b-841b-b0b52e7da693
Pinkerton, Relana
ce716d8c-6495-43fe-9444-725bf2a8a393
Swann, Jonathan R.
7c11a66b-f4b8-4dbf-aa17-ad8b0561b85c
Mayneris-Perxachs, Jordi
921cd6b1-1c40-4cb6-9d70-9d3c4f479a78
Lima, Aldo A.M.
7b08fc40-ffa9-4461-8861-41f891708f7d
Guerrant, Richard L.
b8c9324a-fd9b-401e-b994-105406ee8fbd
Leite, Álvaro M.
e99be6a5-0049-4ede-a919-34456fbbe7d0
Moura, Alessandra F.
1d3a2d2c-403f-432a-b3bf-5fd032972f38
Lima, Noélia L.
4e3f57bc-1028-4520-b7c9-f43097c9ecbc
Soares, Alberto M.
46b11d59-378a-476c-97b1-c6998ea3e6a8
Havt, Alexandre
ab697186-00eb-4d2c-9f77-9079240bee46
Moore, Sean R.
2336a178-2f26-416b-841b-b0b52e7da693
Pinkerton, Relana
ce716d8c-6495-43fe-9444-725bf2a8a393
Swann, Jonathan R.
7c11a66b-f4b8-4dbf-aa17-ad8b0561b85c

Mayneris-Perxachs, Jordi, Lima, Aldo A.M., Guerrant, Richard L., Leite, Álvaro M., Moura, Alessandra F., Lima, Noélia L., Soares, Alberto M., Havt, Alexandre, Moore, Sean R., Pinkerton, Relana and Swann, Jonathan R. (2016) Urinary N-methylnicotinamide and β-aminoisobutyric acid predict catch-up growth in undernourished Brazilian children. Scientific Reports, 6, 1-9, [19780]. (doi:10.1038/srep19780).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Enteric infections, enteropathy and undernutrition in early childhood are preventable risk factors for child deaths, impaired neurodevelopment, and later life metabolic diseases. However, the mechanisms linking these exposures and outcomes remain to be elucidated, as do biomarkers for identifying children at risk. By examining the urinary metabolic phenotypes of nourished and undernourished children participating in a case-control study in Semi-Arid Brazil, we identified key differences with potential relevance to mechanisms, biomarkers and outcomes. Undernutrition was found to perturb several biochemical pathways, including choline and tryptophan metabolism, while also increasing the proteolytic activity of the gut microbiome. Furthermore, a metabolic adaptation was observed in the undernourished children to reduce energy expenditure, reflected by increased N-methylnicotinamide and reduced β-aminoisobutyric acid excretion. Interestingly, accelerated catch-up growth was observed in those undernourished children displaying a more robust metabolic adaptation several months earlier. Hence, urinary N-methylnicotinamide and β-aminoisobutyric acid represent promising biomarkers for predicting short-term growth outcomes in undernourished children and for identifying children destined for further growth shortfalls. These findings have important implications for understanding contributors to long-term sequelae of early undernutrition, including cognitive, growth, and metabolic functions.

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Accepted/In Press date: 14 December 2015
Published date: 27 January 2016
Keywords: Aminoisobutyric Acids/urine, Brazil, Child Development, Child, Preschool, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Infant, Infant Nutrition Disorders/physiopathology, Male, Malnutrition/physiopathology, Niacinamide/analogs & derivatives, Retrospective Studies

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 440775
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/440775
ISSN: 2045-2322
PURE UUID: 3eee22dd-66b6-48d6-a57e-cbc8b6084c88
ORCID for Jonathan R. Swann: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-6485-4529

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Date deposited: 18 May 2020 16:32
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 04:00

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Contributors

Author: Jordi Mayneris-Perxachs
Author: Aldo A.M. Lima
Author: Richard L. Guerrant
Author: Álvaro M. Leite
Author: Alessandra F. Moura
Author: Noélia L. Lima
Author: Alberto M. Soares
Author: Alexandre Havt
Author: Sean R. Moore
Author: Relana Pinkerton

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