2007 GSA Denver Annual Meeting (28–31 October 2007)

Paper No. 1
Presentation Time: 8:00 AM-12:00 PM

CARBON ISOTOPE COMPOSITION OF BLOOD FROM A LARGE POPULATION (N=200) OF HUMANS: IMPLICATIONS FOR INTERPRETATION OF DIET


KRAFT, Rebecca A., Earth and Planetary Sciences, The Johns Hopkins University, 3400 N. Charles Street, Baltimore, MD 21218, JAHREN, A. Hope, Geology and Geophysics, University of Hawaii, 1680 East-West Road, POST 701, Honolulu, HI 96822 and SAUDEK, Christopher D., Department of Medicine, The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, 600 N. Wolfe St, Baltimore, MD 21287, kraft@jhu.edu

Carbon isotope composition of living and ancient human tissues is commonly used for interpretation of diet. The largest datasets assembled, even from modern populations, approach only 26 subjects (Wilkinson et al, 2007), yet these results are often extrapolated to communities of hundreds to thousands of living and ancient human beings. In order to quantify the variation in δ13C value in tissues from a large population of humans of unknown, and therefore presumably varied diet, we performed carbon isotope analysis on 200 individuals using conventional blood-draw techniques. We report the range of these natural abundance carbon stable isotopes in human blood, and discuss the implications of these results on modern dietary studies.

200 blood samples (from 100 females, 100 males) were collected through the Johns Hopkins Medical Institutions. No blood was drawn specifically for this study; all samples were surplus from daily collection of blood. Samples were de-identified, and no information was available to the investigators beyond date of the blood sampling and the gender of the patient. Blood was drawn into tubes without anti-coagulation or other additives, such as EDTA, in order to avoid any carbon contribution from sources other than the subject's blood. For centrifugation, blood was transferred into 15mL polystyrene tubes and separated into serum and clot. Samples were combusted to CO2 in a Eurovector elemental analyzer configured with a Stable Isotope Ratio Mass Spectrometer.

Carbon isotope determinations for serum and clot revealed the following range in δ13C value: -15.6‰ to -23.0‰. Median values as well as means, standard deviations, and ranges did not show significant differences between male and female, or serum and clot. Serum and clot δ13C values from each subject were highly correlated (females R2 = 0.93; males R2 = 0.92).

In summary, the total population studied shows a range in blood δ13C value of 7.2‰. Our finding that there is a range of δ13C values among various individuals is important to the hypothesis that δ13C values reflect dietary intake in modern or ancient human populations. The magnitude above range (7.2‰) is approximately half of the total range attributed across C3 and C4 plants. We discuss the application of these results in the health community as a possible biomarker for dietary intake.