Issue 24, 2019, Issue in Progress

Health effects of kiwi wine on rats: an untargeted metabolic fingerprint study based on GC-MS/TOF

Abstract

Kiwi wine is a popular fermentation product of kiwi fruit in Asian countries. To better understand the potential health effects of kiwi wine, an untargeted gas chromatography-mass spectrometer (GC-MS) approach was taken to assess the metabolic fingerprint of rats after dietary ingestion of kiwi wine. 7 differentially expressed endogenous metabolites from serum and 8 from urine were enriched in carbohydrate metabolism, amino acid metabolism pathway, fat metabolism and other metabolisms and selected from the KEGG. The above results showed that kiwi wine mainly led to a pronounced perturbation of energy metabolism (especially carbohydrate metabolism) during the consumption period. After stopping the supply of kiwi wine 30 days later, 6 and 3 endogenous metabolites from serum and urine respectively were screened and involved in a small part of carbohydrate related amino acid metabolism and fat metabolism, which indicated that the effect of kiwi wine sustained a lasting effect on energy metabolism, amino acid metabolism and lipid metabolism after stopping the supply. Thus, kiwi wine might have a positive function on health associated with the metabolism of its constituents. To the best of our knowledge, this study provides a nutrition field view for the development of the kiwi wine agricultural industry via an untargeted GC-MS metabolomic approach.

Graphical abstract: Health effects of kiwi wine on rats: an untargeted metabolic fingerprint study based on GC-MS/TOF

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
20 Mar 2019
Accepted
29 Apr 2019
First published
03 May 2019
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY license

RSC Adv., 2019,9, 13797-13807

Health effects of kiwi wine on rats: an untargeted metabolic fingerprint study based on GC-MS/TOF

Q. Zeng, H. Song, X. Xu, W. Mao, H. Xie, J. Liang, X. Chen, D. Chen and Y. Zhan, RSC Adv., 2019, 9, 13797 DOI: 10.1039/C9RA02138H

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