iScience (May 2022)

An integrative approach to dietary balance across the life course

  • David Raubenheimer,
  • Alistair M. Senior,
  • Christen Mirth,
  • Zhenwei Cui,
  • Rong Hou,
  • David G. Le Couteur,
  • Samantha M. Solon-Biet,
  • Pierre Léopold,
  • Stephen J. Simpson

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 25, no. 5
p. 104315

Abstract

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Summary: Animals require specific blends of nutrients that vary across the life course and with circumstances, e.g., health and activity levels. Underpinning and complicating these requirements is that individual traits may be optimized on different dietary compositions leading to nutrition-mediated trade-offs among outcomes. Additionally, the food environment may constrain which nutrient mixtures are achievable. Natural selection has equipped animals for solving such multi-dimensional, dynamic challenges of nutrition, but little is understood about the details and their theoretical and practical implications. We present an integrative framework, nutritional geometry, which models complex nutritional interactions in the context of multiple nutrients and across levels of biological organization (e.g., cellular, individual, and population) and levels of analysis (e.g., mechanistic, developmental, ecological, and evolutionary). The framework is generalizable across different situations and taxa. We illustrate this using examples spanning insects to primates and settings (laboratory, and the wild), and demonstrate its relevance for human health.

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