Abstract

Donor milk is the best option when mother’s own milk is unavailable. Heat treatments are applied to ensure donor milk safety. The effects of heat treatments on milk gangliosides—bioactive compounds with beneficial antibacterial, anti-inflammatory, and prebiotic roles—have not been studied. The most abundant gangliosides in non-homogenized human milk were characterized and quantified by liquid chromatography–mass spectrometry (LC–MS)/MS before and after pasteurization treatments mimicking industrial conditions (63 °C/30 min, 72 °C/15 s, 127 °C/5 s, and 140 °C/6 s). Ganglioside stability over a 3-month period was assessed following the storage at 4 and 23 °C. Independent of the heat treatment applied, gangliosides were stable after 3 months of storage at 4 or 23 °C, with only minor variations in individual ganglioside structures. These findings will help to define the ideal processing and storage conditions for donor milk to maximize the preservation of the structure of bioactive compounds to enhance the health of fragile newborns. Moreover, these results highlight the need for, and provide a basis for, a standardized language enabling biological and food companies, regulatory agencies, and other food stakeholders to both annotate and compute the ways in which production, processing, and storage conditions alter or maintain the nutritive, bioactive, and organoleptic properties of ingredients and foods, as well as the qualitative effects these foods and ingredients may have on conferring phenotype in the consuming organism.

Highlights

  • Breastfeeding is generally considered the optimal infant nutrition for the first 6 months of life

  • Characterization and quantification of the bioactive components found in milks, together with the characterization and quantification of the processing conditions that alter them, provide baseline profiles for formula makers to mimic the nutrient and bioactive properties found in human milk

  • This study evaluated the effects of different pasteurization conditions and storage conditions on the composition and quantity of the most abundant human milk gangliosides (GM3, npj Science of Food (2018) 5

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Breastfeeding is generally considered the optimal infant nutrition for the first 6 months of life. The four heat will help to define the ideal processing and storage conditions for treatments most commonly used by the milk banks and by the donor milk to preserve the structure of bioactive compounds for dairy industry Alterations to milk fat globule structure could lead to increased ganglioside release, rendering these compounds are more vulnerable to heat treatment with consequent modifications in their digestibility and/or bioavailability, as well as their biological activity Considering these factors, future studies on human milk should consider the effect of biological effects of homogenization relative to its industrial application

CONCLUSIONS
MATERIALS AND METHODS
Findings
Data availability statement

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