1 research outputs found
Specific Dietary Preferences Are Linked to Differing Gut Microbial Metabolic Activity in Response to Dark Chocolate Intake
Systems biology approaches are providing novel insights
into the
role of nutrition for the management of health and disease. In the
present study, we investigated if dietary preference for dark chocolate
in healthy subjects may lead to different metabolic response to daily
chocolate consumption. Using NMR- and MS-based metabolic profiling
of blood plasma and urine, we monitored the metabolic response of
10 participants stratified as chocolate desiring and eating regularly
dark chocolate (CD) and 10 participants stratified as chocolate indifferent
and eating rarely dark chocolate (CI) to a daily consumption of 50
g of dark chocolate as part of a standardized diet over a one week
period. We demonstrated that preference for chocolate leads to different
metabolic response to chocolate consumption. Daily intake of dark
chocolate significantly increased HDL cholesterol by 6% and decreased
polyunsaturated acyl ether phospholipids. Dark chocolate intake could
also induce an improvement in the metabolism of long chain fatty acid,
as noted by a compositional change in plasma fatty acyl carnitines.
Moreover, a relationship between regular long-term dietary exposure
to a small amount of dark chocolate, gut microbiota, and phenolics
was highlighted, providing novel insights into biological processes
associated with cocoa bioactives