COST Action FA1403 POSITIVe

Link to this page

COST Action FA1403 POSITIVe

Authors

Publications

Systematic analysis of nutrigenomic effects of polyphenols related to cardiometabolic health in humans - Evidence from untargeted mRNA and miRNA studies

Ruskovska, Tatjana; Budić-Leto, Irena; Corral-Jara, Karla Fabiola; Ajdžanović, Vladimir; Arola-Arnal, Anna; Bravo, Francisca Isabel; Deligiannidou, Georgia-Eirini; Havlik, Jaroslav; Janeva, Milkica; Kistanova, Elena; Kontogiorgis, Christos; Krga, Irena; Massaro, Marika; Miler, Marko; Harnafi, Hicham; Milošević, Verica; Morand, Christine; Scoditti, Egeria; Suárez, Manuel; Vauzour, David; Milenkovic, Dragan

(Elsevier B.V., 2022)

TY  - JOUR
AU  - Ruskovska, Tatjana
AU  - Budić-Leto, Irena
AU  - Corral-Jara, Karla Fabiola
AU  - Ajdžanović, Vladimir
AU  - Arola-Arnal, Anna
AU  - Bravo, Francisca Isabel
AU  - Deligiannidou, Georgia-Eirini
AU  - Havlik, Jaroslav
AU  - Janeva, Milkica
AU  - Kistanova, Elena
AU  - Kontogiorgis, Christos
AU  - Krga, Irena
AU  - Massaro, Marika
AU  - Miler, Marko
AU  - Harnafi, Hicham
AU  - Milošević, Verica
AU  - Morand, Christine
AU  - Scoditti, Egeria
AU  - Suárez, Manuel
AU  - Vauzour, David
AU  - Milenkovic, Dragan
PY  - 2022
UR  - http://radar.ibiss.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/4977
AB  - Cardiovascular and metabolic disorders present major causes of mortality in the ageing population. Polyphenols present in human diets possess cardiometabolic protective properties, however their underlying molecular mechanisms in humans are still not well identified. Even though preclinical and in vitro studies advocate that these bioactives can modulate gene expression, most studies were performed using targeted approaches. With the objective to decipher the molecular mechanisms underlying polyphenols cardiometabolic preventive properties in humans, we performed integrative multi-omic bioinformatic analyses of published studies which reported improvements of cardiometabolic risk factors following polyphenol intake, together with genomic analyses performed using untargeted approach. We identified 5 studies within our criteria and nearly 5000 differentially expressed genes, both mRNAs and miRNAs, in peripheral blood cells. Integrative bioinformatic analyses (e.g. pathway and gene network analyses, identification of transcription factors, correlation of gene expression profiles with those associated with diseases and drug intake) revealed that these genes are involved in the processes such as cell adhesion and mobility, immune system, metabolism, or cell signaling. We also identified 27 miRNAs known to regulate processes such as cell cytoskeleton, chemotaxis, cell signaling, or cell metabolism. Gene expression profiles negatively correlated with expression profiles of cardiovascular disease patients, while a positive correlation was observed with gene expression profiles following intake of drugs against cardiometabolic disorders. These analyses further advocate for health protective effects of these bioactives against age-associated diseases. In conclusion, polyphenols can exert multi-genomic modifications in humans and use of untargeted methods coupled with bioinformatic analyses represent the best approach to decipher molecular mechanisms underlying healthy-ageing effects of these bioactives.
PB  - Elsevier B.V.
T2  - Ageing Research Reviews
T1  - Systematic analysis of nutrigenomic effects of polyphenols related to cardiometabolic health in humans - Evidence from untargeted mRNA and miRNA studies
VL  - 79:101649
DO  - 10.1016/j.arr.2022.101649
ER  - 
@article{
author = "Ruskovska, Tatjana and Budić-Leto, Irena and Corral-Jara, Karla Fabiola and Ajdžanović, Vladimir and Arola-Arnal, Anna and Bravo, Francisca Isabel and Deligiannidou, Georgia-Eirini and Havlik, Jaroslav and Janeva, Milkica and Kistanova, Elena and Kontogiorgis, Christos and Krga, Irena and Massaro, Marika and Miler, Marko and Harnafi, Hicham and Milošević, Verica and Morand, Christine and Scoditti, Egeria and Suárez, Manuel and Vauzour, David and Milenkovic, Dragan",
year = "2022",
abstract = "Cardiovascular and metabolic disorders present major causes of mortality in the ageing population. Polyphenols present in human diets possess cardiometabolic protective properties, however their underlying molecular mechanisms in humans are still not well identified. Even though preclinical and in vitro studies advocate that these bioactives can modulate gene expression, most studies were performed using targeted approaches. With the objective to decipher the molecular mechanisms underlying polyphenols cardiometabolic preventive properties in humans, we performed integrative multi-omic bioinformatic analyses of published studies which reported improvements of cardiometabolic risk factors following polyphenol intake, together with genomic analyses performed using untargeted approach. We identified 5 studies within our criteria and nearly 5000 differentially expressed genes, both mRNAs and miRNAs, in peripheral blood cells. Integrative bioinformatic analyses (e.g. pathway and gene network analyses, identification of transcription factors, correlation of gene expression profiles with those associated with diseases and drug intake) revealed that these genes are involved in the processes such as cell adhesion and mobility, immune system, metabolism, or cell signaling. We also identified 27 miRNAs known to regulate processes such as cell cytoskeleton, chemotaxis, cell signaling, or cell metabolism. Gene expression profiles negatively correlated with expression profiles of cardiovascular disease patients, while a positive correlation was observed with gene expression profiles following intake of drugs against cardiometabolic disorders. These analyses further advocate for health protective effects of these bioactives against age-associated diseases. In conclusion, polyphenols can exert multi-genomic modifications in humans and use of untargeted methods coupled with bioinformatic analyses represent the best approach to decipher molecular mechanisms underlying healthy-ageing effects of these bioactives.",
publisher = "Elsevier B.V.",
journal = "Ageing Research Reviews",
title = "Systematic analysis of nutrigenomic effects of polyphenols related to cardiometabolic health in humans - Evidence from untargeted mRNA and miRNA studies",
volume = "79:101649",
doi = "10.1016/j.arr.2022.101649"
}
Ruskovska, T., Budić-Leto, I., Corral-Jara, K. F., Ajdžanović, V., Arola-Arnal, A., Bravo, F. I., Deligiannidou, G., Havlik, J., Janeva, M., Kistanova, E., Kontogiorgis, C., Krga, I., Massaro, M., Miler, M., Harnafi, H., Milošević, V., Morand, C., Scoditti, E., Suárez, M., Vauzour, D.,& Milenkovic, D.. (2022). Systematic analysis of nutrigenomic effects of polyphenols related to cardiometabolic health in humans - Evidence from untargeted mRNA and miRNA studies. in Ageing Research Reviews
Elsevier B.V.., 79:101649.
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.arr.2022.101649
Ruskovska T, Budić-Leto I, Corral-Jara KF, Ajdžanović V, Arola-Arnal A, Bravo FI, Deligiannidou G, Havlik J, Janeva M, Kistanova E, Kontogiorgis C, Krga I, Massaro M, Miler M, Harnafi H, Milošević V, Morand C, Scoditti E, Suárez M, Vauzour D, Milenkovic D. Systematic analysis of nutrigenomic effects of polyphenols related to cardiometabolic health in humans - Evidence from untargeted mRNA and miRNA studies. in Ageing Research Reviews. 2022;79:101649.
doi:10.1016/j.arr.2022.101649 .
Ruskovska, Tatjana, Budić-Leto, Irena, Corral-Jara, Karla Fabiola, Ajdžanović, Vladimir, Arola-Arnal, Anna, Bravo, Francisca Isabel, Deligiannidou, Georgia-Eirini, Havlik, Jaroslav, Janeva, Milkica, Kistanova, Elena, Kontogiorgis, Christos, Krga, Irena, Massaro, Marika, Miler, Marko, Harnafi, Hicham, Milošević, Verica, Morand, Christine, Scoditti, Egeria, Suárez, Manuel, Vauzour, David, Milenkovic, Dragan, "Systematic analysis of nutrigenomic effects of polyphenols related to cardiometabolic health in humans - Evidence from untargeted mRNA and miRNA studies" in Ageing Research Reviews, 79:101649 (2022),
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.arr.2022.101649 . .
18
12
9