Abstract

Oxysterols are products of enzymatic and/or chemical cholesterol oxidation. While some of the former possess broad antiviral activities, the latter mostly originate from the deterioration of the nutritional value of foodstuff after exposure to heat, light, radiation and oxygen, raising questions about their potential health risks. We evaluated the presence of selected oxysterols in bovine colostrum and monitored the evolution of their cholesterol ratio throughout an entire industrial-scale milk production chain and after industrially employed storage procedures of milk powders. We report here for the first time the presence of high levels of the enzymatic oxysterol 27-hydroxycholesterol (27OHC) in concentrations of antiviral interest in bovine colostrum (87.04 ng mL-1) that decreased during the first postpartum days (56.35 ng mL-1). Of note, this oxysterol is also observed in milk and milk products and is not negatively affected by industrial processing or storage. We further highlight an exponential increase of the non-enzymatic oxysterols 7β-hydroxycholesterol (7βOHC) and 7-ketocholesterol (7KC) in both whole (WMPs) and skimmed milk powders (SMPs) during prolonged storage, confirming their role as reliable biomarkers of cholesterol oxidation over time: after 12 months, 7βOHC reached in both SMPs and WMPs amounts that have been found to be potentially toxic in vitro (265.46 ng g-1 and 569.83 ng g-1, respectively). Interestingly, industrial processes appeared to affect the generation of 7βOHC and 7KC differently, depending on the presence of fat in the product: while their ratios increased significantly after skimming and processing of skimmed milk and milk products, this was not observed after processing whole milk and milk cream.

Highlights

  • Interest towards oxysterols has attracted two main audiences in food science

  • Food technologists have studied non-enzymatic oxysterols since they mainly originate from industrial processing of cholesterol-containing animal products and storage procedures that can decrease the nutritional properties of foodstuffs.[1,2]

  • The collected samples belonged to the following steps of the production chain: fresh raw whole-milk, skimmed milk, raw milk cream, pasteurized standardized whole and skimmed milk, concentrated whole and skimmed milk treated at higher temperature, pasteurized milk cream, anhydrous milk fat, fresh spray-dried whole (WMP) and skimmed milk powder (SMP), stored Whole-milk powder (WMP) and skimmed milk powders (SMPs) (6 and 12 months)

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Summary

Introduction

Interest towards oxysterols has attracted two main audiences in food science. Food technologists have studied non-enzymatic oxysterols since they mainly originate from industrial processing of cholesterol-containing animal products (e.g. meat, fish, eggs, and milk) and storage procedures that can decrease the nutritional properties of foodstuffs.[1,2] These include various processes that are generally applied before food is consumed such as heating, spray-drying, and irradiation or exposure to light and oxygen during storage that may trigger cholesterol oxidation. Nutritionists have focused on both enzymatic and non-enzymatic oxysterols because they mediate many pathophysiological functions including cellular toxicity and inhibition of DNA synthesis, and regulate a variety of cell functions including innate and adaptative immunity and some possess broad antiviral activities.[3,4,5]. Over the last few years, growing evidence is clearly indicating how only oxysterols of enzymatic origin and in particular the side chain oxysterols 25-hydroxycholesterol and 27-cholesterol may have a pleiotropic physiological role.[6,7] Non-enzymatic oxysterols, in particular 7-ketocholesterol (7KC) and 7β-hydroxycholesterol (7βOHC), have been defined as accurate markers of cholesterol auto-oxidation, as their concentration heavily increases during inflammation and other processes characterized by cell and tissue oxidative stress.[8,9,10] In this relation, it is worth outlining that cholesterol oxidation products (COPs) often measured in foodstuffs belong to the not enzymatic oxysterol sub-family

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