Ferdi A. van Dorsten
Max Planck Society
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Featured researches published by Ferdi A. van Dorsten.
Metabolomics | 2008
Johan A. Westerhuis; Huub C. J. Hoefsloot; Suzanne Smit; Daniel J. Vis; Age K. Smilde; Ewoud J. J. van Velzen; John P. M. van Duijnhoven; Ferdi A. van Dorsten
Classifying groups of individuals based on their metabolic profile is one of the main topics in metabolomics research. Due to the low number of individuals compared to the large number of variables, this is not an easy task. PLSDA is one of the data analysis methods used for the classification. Unfortunately this method eagerly overfits the data and rigorous validation is necessary. The validation however is far from straightforward. Is this paper we will discuss a strategy based on cross model validation and permutation testing to validate the classification models. It is also shown that too optimistic results are obtained when the validation is not done properly. Furthermore, we advocate against the use of PLSDA score plots for inference of class differences.
Journal of Proteome Research | 2009
Ewoud J. J. van Velzen; Johan A. Westerhuis; John van Duynhoven; Ferdi A. van Dorsten; Christian H. Grün; Doris M. Jacobs; Guus S. M. J. E. Duchateau; Daniel J. Vis; Age K. Smilde
An integration of metabolomics and pharmacokinetics (or nutrikinetics) is introduced as a concept to describe a human study population with different metabolic phenotypes following a nutritional intervention. The approach facilitates an unbiased analysis of the time-response of body fluid metabolites from crossover designed intervention trials without prior knowledge of the underlying metabolic pathways. The method is explained for the case of a human intervention study in which the nutrikinetic analysis of polyphenol-rich black tea consumption was performed in urine over a period of 48 h. First, multilevel PLS-DA analysis was applied to the urinary 1H NMR profiles to select the most differentiating biomarkers between the verum and placebo samples. Then, a one-compartment nutrikinetic model with first-order excretion, a lag time, and a baseline function was fitted to the time courses of these selected biomarkers. The nutrikinetic model used here fully exploits the crossover structure in the data by fitting the data from both the treatment period and the placebo period simultaneously. To demonstrate the procedure, a selected set of urinary biomarkers was used in the model fitting. These metabolites include hippuric acid, 4-hydroxyhippuric acid and 1,3-dihydroxyphenyl-2-O-sulfate and derived from microbial fermentation of polyphenols in the gut. Variations in urinary excretion between- and within the subjects were observed, and used to provide a phenotypic description of the test population.
Journal of Chromatography B | 2008
Christian H. Grün; Ferdi A. van Dorsten; Doris M. Jacobs; Marie Le Belleguic; Ewoud J. J. van Velzen; Max O. Bingham; Hans-Gerd Janssen; John van Duynhoven
Flavonoids, a subclass of polyphenols, are major constituents of many plant-based foods and beverages, including tea, wine and chocolate. Epidemiological studies have shown that a flavonoid-rich diet is associated with reduced risk of cardiovascular diseases. The majority of the flavonoids survive intact until they reach the colon where they are then extensively metabolized into smaller fragments. Here, we describe the development of GC-MS-based methods for the profiling of phenolic microbial fermentation products in urine, plasma, and fecal water. Furthermore, the methods are applicable for profiling products obtained from in vitro batch culture fermentation models. The methods incorporate enzymatic deconjugation, liquid-liquid extraction, derivatization, and subsequent analysis by GC-MS. At the level of individual compounds, the methods gave recoveries better than 80% with inter-day precision being better than 20%, depending on the matrix. Limits of detection were below 0.1 microg/ml for most phenolic acids. The newly developed methods were successfully applied to samples from human and in-vitro intervention trials, studying the metabolic impact of flavonoid intake. In conclusion, the methods presented are robust and generally applicable to diverse biological fluids. Its profiling character is useful to investigate on a large scale the gut microbiome-mediated bioavailability of flavonoids.
NMR in Biomedicine | 1999
Ferdi A. van Dorsten; Ryuji Hata; Keiichiro Maeda; Claudia Franke; Manfred Eis; Konstantin-Alexander Hossmann; Mathias Hoehn
Temporary focal ischaemia was induced in wild‐type C57Black/6 mice by thread occlusion of the middle cerebral artery (MCA). Recirculation was started after 60 min and maintained for 24 h, after which the mouse brain was frozen in situ. Development of the cerebral infarct was monitored by diffusion‐, perfusion‐ and T2‐weighted magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) during ischaemia, during the early reperfusion period of 90 min, and at 24 h after reperfusion. Ischaemia caused a marked reduction of the perfusion signal intensity and of the apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) of tissue water in the ipsilateral MCA territory. In sham‐operated control animals ADC remained unchanged. Hemispheric lesion volume after 1 h MCA occlusion was 53 ± 6% (n = 6), as defined by an ADC decrease of more than 20%. Recirculation reduced hemispheric lesion volume to only 27 ± 13%, while there was a trend towards secondary lesion growth at 24 h. Post‐ischaemic recovery of perfusion was slow, heterogeneous and incomplete. A region‐of‐interest analysis showed only partial and transient recovery of the ADC, particularly in the dorsolateral cortex and lateral caudate putamen, which may be explained by inadequate reperfusion in these regions. Detailed MRI studies of cerebral ischaemia and reperfusion may now also be performed in the transgenic mice. Copyright
The American Journal of Clinical Nutrition | 2013
John van Duynhoven; Elaine E. Vaughan; Ferdi A. van Dorsten; Victoria Gomez-Roldan; Ric C. H. de Vos; Jacques Vervoort; Justin Jj van der Hooft; Laure C. Roger; Richard Draijer; Doris M. Jacobs
Epidemiologic studies have convincingly associated consumption of black tea with reduced cardiovascular risk. Research on the bioactive molecules has traditionally been focused on polyphenols, such as catechins. Black tea polyphenols (BTPs), however, mainly consist of high-molecular-weight species that predominantly persist in the colon. There, they can undergo a wide range of bioconversions by the resident colonic microbiota but can in turn also modulate gut microbial diversity. The impact of BTPs on colon microbial composition can now be assessed by microbiomics technologies. Novel metabolomics platforms coupled to de novo identification are currently available to cover the large diversity of BTP bioconversions by the gut microbiota. Nutrikinetic modeling has been proven to be critical for defining nutritional phenotypes related to gut microbial bioconversion capacity. The bioactivity of circulating metabolites has been studied only to a certain extent. Bioassays dedicated to specific aspects of gut and cardiovascular health have been used, although often at physiologically irrelevant concentrations and with limited coverage of relevant metabolite classes and their conjugated forms. Evidence for cardiovascular benefits of BTPs points toward antiinflammatory and blood pressure-lowering properties and improvement in platelet and endothelial function for specific microbial bioconversion products. Clearly, more work is needed to fill in existing knowledge gaps and to assess the in vitro and in vivo bioactivity of known and newly identified BTP metabolites. It is also of interest to assess how phenotypic variation in gut microbial BTP bioconversion capacity relates to gut and cardiovascular health predisposition.
NMR in Biomedicine | 2008
Stefan A. J. Coolen; Clare A. Daykin; John van Duynhoven; Ferdi A. van Dorsten; Florian Wulfert; Jolanda Mathot; Marc R. M. Scheltinga; Otto B. Stroosma; Huib Vader; Marc H. Wijnen
Intermittent claudication has proved to be a good in vivo model for ischaemia–reperfusion. For assessment of ischaemia–reperfusion damage, the known biochemical markers all have disadvantages with respect to sensitivity and interference with other physiological events. In this work, we studied the metabolic effects of ischaemia–reperfusion in patients with intermittent claudication, and the effects of vitamin C and E intervention, using both traditional biochemical measurements and 1H‐NMR‐based metabonomics on urine and plasma. The 1H‐NMR spectra were subjected to multivariate modelling using principal components discriminant analysis, and the observed clusters were validated using joint deployment of univariate analysis of variance and Tukey–Kramer honestly significant difference (HSD) testing. The study involved 14 patients with intermittent claudication and three healthy volunteers, who were monitored during a walking test, before and after a vitamin C/E intervention, and after a washout period. The effect of exercise was only observable for a limited number of biochemical markers, whereas 1H NMR revealed an effect in line with anaerobic ATP production via glycolysis in exercising (ischaemic) muscle of the claudicants. Thus, the beneficial effect of vitamins C and E in claudicants was more pronounced when observed by metabonomics than by traditional biochemical markers. The main effect was more rapid recovery from exercise to resting state metabolism. Furthermore, after intervention, claudicants tended to have lower concentrations of lactate and glucose and several other citric acid cycle metabolites, whereas acetoacetate was increased. The observed metabolic changes in the plasma suggest that intake of vitamin C/E leads to increased muscle oxidative metabolism. Copyright
Nutrients | 2016
Richard Draijer; Ferdi A. van Dorsten; Yvonne E. Zebregs; Boudewijn Hollebrands; Guus Duchateau; Christian H. Grün
Polyphenols, a complex group of secondary plant metabolites, including flavonoids and phenolic acids, have been studied in depth for their health-related benefits. The activity of polyphenols may, however, be hampered when consumed together with protein-rich food products, due to the interaction between polyphenols and proteins. To that end we have tested the bioavailability of representatives of a range of polyphenol classes when consumed for five days in different beverage matrices. In a placebo-controlled, randomized, cross-over study, 35 healthy males received either six placebo gelatine capsules consumed with 200 mL of water, six capsules with 800 mg polyphenols derived from red wine and grape extracts, or the same dose of polyphenols incorporated into 200 mL of either pasteurized dairy drink, soy drink (both containing 3.4% proteins) or fruit-flavoured protein-free drink . At the end of the intervention urine and blood was collected and analysed for a broad range of phenolic compounds using Gas Chromatography–Mass Spectrometry (GC-MS), Liquid Chromatography–Multiple Reaction Monitoring–Mass Spectrometry (LC-MRM-MS), and Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR) spectroscopy techniques. The plasma and urine concentrations of the polyphenols identified increased with all formats, including the protein-rich beverages. Compared to capsule ingestion, consumption of polyphenol-rich beverages containing either dairy, soy or no proteins had minor to no effect on the bioavailability and excretion of phenolic compounds in plasma (118% ± 9%) and urine (98% ± 2%). We conclude that intake of polyphenols incorporated in protein-rich drinks does not have a major impact on the bioavailability of a range of different polyphenols and phenolic metabolites.
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry | 2006
Ferdi A. van Dorsten; Clare A. Daykin; Theo P.J. Mulder; John van Duynhoven
NMR in Biomedicine | 2008
Doris M. Jacobs; Nancy Deltimple; Ewoud J. J. van Velzen; Ferdi A. van Dorsten; Max O. Bingham; Elaine E. Vaughan; John van Duynhoven
BMC Medical Genomics | 2013
Suzan Wopereis; Danielle Wolvers; Marjan van Erk; Michiel Gribnau; Bas Kremer; Ferdi A. van Dorsten; Esther Boelsma; Ursula Garczarek; Nicole Hp Cnubben; Leon G. J. Frenken; Paul van der Logt; Henk F. J. Hendriks; Ruud Albers; John van Duynhoven; Ben van Ommen; Doris M. Jacobs