Following the Digestion of Milk Proteins from Mother to Baby
Author(s) -
Thérèse A. Holton,
Vaishnavi Vijayakumar,
David C. Dallas,
Andrés GuerreroMartínez,
Robyn Borghese,
Carlito B. Lebrilla,
J. Bruce German,
Daniela Barile,
Mark A. Underwood,
Denis C. Shields,
Nora Khaldi
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
journal of proteome research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.644
H-Index - 161
eISSN - 1535-3907
pISSN - 1535-3893
DOI - 10.1021/pr5006907
Subject(s) - digestion (alchemy) , stomach , ingestion , breast milk , enzyme , human stomach , biology , food science , cleavage (geology) , breast feeding , enzyme assay , biochemistry , physiology , chemistry , medicine , chromatography , pediatrics , paleontology , fracture (geology)
Little is known about the digestive process in infants. In particular, the chronological activity of enzymes across the course of digestion in the infant remains largely unknown. To create a temporal picture of how milk proteins are digested, enzyme activity was compared between intact human milk samples from three mothers and the gastric samples from each of their 4-12 day postpartum infants, 2 h after breast milk ingestion. The activities of 7 distinct enzymes are predicted in the infant stomach based on their observed cleavage pattern in peptidomics data. We found that the same patterns of cleavage were evident in both intact human milk and gastric milk samples, demonstrating that the enzyme activities that begin in milk persist in the infant stomach. However, the extent of enzyme activity is found to vary greatly between the intact milk and gastric samples. Overall, we observe that milk-specific proteins are cleaved at higher levels in the stomach compared to human milk. Notably, the enzymes we predict here only explain 78% of the cleavages uniquely observed in the gastric samples, highlighting that further investigation of the specific enzyme activities associated with digestion in infants is warranted.
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