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In vivo digestomics of milk proteins in human milk and infant formula using a suckling rat pup model
Institution:1. Metabolic Research Unit, School of Medicine, Deakin University, Geelong, Victoria, Australia;2. Freedom Foods Group Ltd, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia;3. Institute for Frontier Materials, Deakin University, Geelong, Victoria, Australia;4. Department of Anatomy and Developmental Biology, Monash University, Australia;1. Department of Nutrition, University of California, Davis, CA 95616, USA;2. Institute of Dairy Science, MoE Key Laboratory of Molecular Animal Nutrition, College of Animal Sciences, Zhejiang University, Hangzhou, 310058, PR China
Abstract:Human milk is the optimal mode of infant feeding for the first several months of life, and infant formulas serve as an alternative when breast-feeding is not possible. Milk proteins have a balanced amino acid composition and some of them provide beneficial bioactivities in their intact forms. They also encrypt a variety of bioactive peptides, possibly contributing to infant health and growth. However, there is limited knowledge of how milk proteins are digested in the gastrointestinal tract and bioactive peptides are released in infants. A peptidomic analysis was conducted to identify peptides released from milk proteins in human milk and infant formula, using a suckling rat pup model. Among the major milk proteins targeted, α-lactalbumin and β-casein in human milk, and β-lactoglobulin and β-casein in infant formula were the main sources of peptides, and these peptides covered large parts of the parental proteins’ sequences. Release of peptides was concentrated to specific regions, such as residues 70–92 of β-casein in human milk, residues 39–55 of β-lactoglobulin in infant formula, and residues 57–96 and 145–161 of β-CN in infant formula, where resistance to gastrointestinal digestion was suggested. In the context of bioactive peptides, release of fragments containing known bioactive peptides was confirmed, such as β-CN-derived opioid and antihypertensive peptides. It is therefore likely that these fragments are of biological significance in neonatal health and development.
Keywords:Human milk  Infant formula  Milk proteins  Bioactive peptides  Suckling rat pups
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