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Human metabolic profiles are stably controlled by genetic and environmental variation.

Authors :
Nicholson G
Rantalainen M
Maher AD
Li JV
Malmodin D
Ahmadi KR
Faber JH
Hallgrímsdóttir IB
Barrett A
Toft H
Krestyaninova M
Viksna J
Neogi SG
Dumas ME
Sarkans U
The Molpage Consortium
Silverman BW
Donnelly P
Nicholson JK
Allen M
Zondervan KT
Lindon JC
Spector TD
McCarthy MI
Holmes E
Baunsgaard D
Holmes CC
Source :
Molecular systems biology [Mol Syst Biol] 2011 Aug 30; Vol. 7, pp. 525. Date of Electronic Publication: 2011 Aug 30.
Publication Year :
2011

Abstract

¹H Nuclear Magnetic Resonance spectroscopy (¹H NMR) is increasingly used to measure metabolite concentrations in sets of biological samples for top-down systems biology and molecular epidemiology. For such purposes, knowledge of the sources of human variation in metabolite concentrations is valuable, but currently sparse. We conducted and analysed a study to create such a resource. In our unique design, identical and non-identical twin pairs donated plasma and urine samples longitudinally. We acquired ¹H NMR spectra on the samples, and statistically decomposed variation in metabolite concentration into familial (genetic and common-environmental), individual-environmental, and longitudinally unstable components. We estimate that stable variation, comprising familial and individual-environmental factors, accounts on average for 60% (plasma) and 47% (urine) of biological variation in ¹H NMR-detectable metabolite concentrations. Clinically predictive metabolic variation is likely nested within this stable component, so our results have implications for the effective design of biomarker-discovery studies. We provide a power-calculation method which reveals that sample sizes of a few thousand should offer sufficient statistical precision to detect ¹H NMR-based biomarkers quantifying predisposition to disease.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1744-4292
Volume :
7
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Molecular systems biology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
21878913
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/msb.2011.57