3 research outputs found
J. J. Faulks
Made available by the Northern Territory Library via the Publications (Legal Deposit) Act 2004 (NT).Date:2001-01"Top End Waterways Project"
January 2001"
At head of title: Top End Waterways Project.
"Natural Heritage Trust ; Lands Planning Environment ; National Landcare Program"
Differential Digestion of Human Milk Proteins in a Simulated Stomach Model
A key
element in understanding how human milk proteins support
the health and development of the neonate is to understand how individual
proteins are affected during digestion. In the present study, a dynamic
gastric model was used to simulate infant gastric digestion of human
milk, and a subsequent proteomic approach was applied to study the
behavior of individual proteins. A total of 413 human milk proteins
were quantified in this study. This approach demonstrated a high degree
of variability in the susceptibility of human milk proteins to gastric
digestion. Specifically this study reports that lipoproteins are among
the class of slowly digested proteins during gastric processes. The
levels of integral lysozyme C and partial lactadherin in milk whey
increase over digestion. Mucins, ribonuclease 4, and macrophage mannose
receptor 1 are also resistant to gastric digestion. The retention
or enhancement in whey protein abundance can be ascribed to the digestive
release of milk-fat-globule-membrane or immune-cell enclosed proteins
that are not initially accessible in milk. Immunoglobulins are more
resistant to digestion compared to total milk proteins, and within
the immunoglobulin class IgA and IgM are more resistant to digestion
compared to IgG. The gastric digestion of milk proteins becomes more
apparent from this study