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March 18, 2008

Nutrigenomics On The Menu In Paris

Ahhh, Paris! City of food and fashion…But the latest trend to hit the food industry is certainly no fad. Personalised nutrition is the 'new black' in the world of food. No longer do we need to embarrass ourselves by appearing at the supermarket with a trolley full of identical shopping to our neighbour. Whether or not you're wearing the same shoes, you almost definitely won't be eating the same food.

While the science of nutrigenomics may be another decade away from the supermarket shelves, it is on the tip of the tongue of every molecular nutritionist these days. And many of these were assembled in Paris at the end of last week for the two-day Nutrigenomics 2008 meeting. Organised by the International Society of Antioxidants in health and Nutrition, the meeting brought together the academics and R&D teams from across the globe who are developing, or should I say, designing the future of food.

Vive la difference!
The science of nutrigenomics has become very well established in a relatively short time. The term has been appearing on the CAB Abstracts database since not long after it was first coined way back in the late 1990's. 'Nutrigenomics' was awarded thesaurus status in the summer of 2004, making all the relevant literature even easier to track down. A year later, Dolores Corella and Jose Ordovas had already reviewed the field using the example of cardiovascular diseases, where the interactions between the human genome, diet and disease were being explored extensively. Further developments were discussed in January this year, when Anne-Marie Minihane's work at Reading was given special attention on www.nutritionandfoodsciences.org.
In the interim, a whole family of 'omics' research has sprung up, mushroom-like in the field of molecular medicine, ranging from genomics to metabonomics and covering everything in between.

Nutritionally, however, the important thing to understand so far is the difference between nutrigenomics and nutrigenetics, according to Dr. Siân Astley, communications manager of the European Nutrigenomics Organisation. Reporting on her opening presentation at Nutrigenomics 2008, Nutra-Ingredients.com quoted Astley's differentiation of the way in which food and its component nutrients affect the genome (in terms of altering gene expression, the nutrigenomics) between the effect that an individual's genetic makeup has on the response to the diet (known as nutrigenetics).
Integrating all these pieces of the puzzle would have a profound effect, not only on our understanding of the complex relationships between the human body and the food we give it, but on turning this to our advantage through applying this knowledge to ourselves and, importantly, to our food.

Prêt à manger?
The food industry, naturally has already caught on to this potential. As Dr. Martin Kussman, group leader of functional genomics at Nestlé was reported as saying on yesterday's Nutra-Ingredients.com, 'We see it as the future. Adding value through functionality is where the margin is.' Nestlé, along with other major food corporates, has a long history of investment into food functionality, so they should know.
While the potential for tackling disease and affording the population a healthy retirement, whatever their genetic disposition has hogged the spotlight for some time, Kussman sees far wide implications, including sports nutrition. In fact anywhere where genetics and nutrition both make a difference, there is a potential application for the technology.

Personalised nutrition is going to be big. Very big. And as long as it stays with the food industry and doesn't get gobbled up by the pharmaceutical giants, it will be as tasty as it is healthy. Maybe they can even add in a personalised menu to match.

A word of warning, though, if you're already navigating off to hunt down one of the testing kits available on the internet: Personalised nutrition needs personalised testing.
A one size fits all approach simply doesn't work with nutrigenomics. That applies equally to the tests and to the advice. The science simply isn't strong enough yet to mix nutrigenetics with nutrigenomics and come up with something that will satisfy your body's individual needs as much as your taste buds.

References
Corella, D. and Ordovas, J.M. (2005). Genetics, diet and cardiovascular diseases. Nutrition Abstracts and Reviews: Series A 75(4), 1N-13N.

Mellor, S. (2008). Feeding the Phenotype - From Research to Reality. In Brief and In Depth, www.nutritionandfoodsciemces.org.

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