Abstract

Commercially available and traditional dairy products differ in terms of their manufacturing processes. In this study, commercially available and traditionally fermented cheese, yogurt, and milk beverages were analyzed and compared. The metabolomic technique of ultra-performance liquid chromatography-quadrupole-time of flight mass spectrometry (UPLC-Q-TOF) in the MSE mode was used in combination with statistical methods, including univariate analysis and chemometric analysis, to determine the differences in metabolite profiles between commercially and traditionally fermented dairy products. The experimental results were analyzed statistically and showed that traditional and commercial dairy products were well differentiated in both positive and negative ion modes, with significant differences observed between the samples. After screening for metabolite differences, we detected differences between traditional milk beverages and yogurt and their commercial counterparts in terms of the levels of compounds such as l-lysine, l-methionine, l-citrulline, l-proline, l-serine, l-valine and l-homocysteine, and of short peptides such as Asp-Arg, Gly-Arg, His-Pro, Pro-Asn. The greatest difference between commercially available and traditional cheese was in the short peptide composition, as commercially available and traditional cheese is rich in short peptides.

Highlights

  • IntroductionDairy products are a fundamental component of most people’s daily diets, and dairy products account for an increasing proportion of people’s caloric intake

  • The dairy industry has developed rapidly in recent years

  • The results demonstrate that the traditional dairy products from Russia have a complex lactic acid bacteria composition [2]

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Summary

Introduction

Dairy products are a fundamental component of most people’s daily diets, and dairy products account for an increasing proportion of people’s caloric intake. Today, fermented food accounts for nearly 25–30% of the typical diet worldwide [1]. Traditional fermented dairy products, such as fermented milk curd, cheese and yogurt are very rich in nutrients. Russia is a country with a long history and Buryatia is one of the member states of the Russian Federation. Due to their lifestyle the Mongolian people in Buryatia have abundant experience in making traditional dairy products. Jie et al collected traditional dairy products including cheese from Buryatia and other parts of Russia. A total of 599 strains of lactic acid bacteria belonging to seven genera and 30 species were

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