Abstract

Digestion of milk proteins in the premature infant stomach releases functional peptides; however, which peptides are present has not been reported. Premature infants are often fed a combination of human milk and bovine milk fortifiers, but the variety of functional peptides released from both human and bovine milk proteins remains uncharacterized. This study applied peptidomics to investigate the peptides released in gastric digestion of mother’s milk proteins and supplemental bovine milk proteins in premature infants. Peptides were assessed for homology against a database of known functional peptides—Milk Bioactive Peptide Database. The peptidomic data were analyzed to interpret which proteases most likely released them from the parent protein. We identified 5,264 unique peptides from bovine and human milk proteins within human milk, fortifier or infant gastric samples. Plasmin was predicted to be the most active protease in milk, while pepsin or cathepsin D were predicted to be most active in the stomach. Alignment of the peptide distribution showed a different digestion pattern between human and bovine proteins. The number of peptides with high homology to known functional peptides (antimicrobial, angiotensin-converting enzyme-inhibitory, antioxidant, immunomodulatory, etc.) increased from milk to the premature infant stomach and was greater from bovine milk proteins than human milk proteins. The differential release of bioactive peptides from human and bovine milk proteins may impact overall health outcomes in premature infants.

Highlights

  • Human milk composition is evolutionarily optimized to provide essential nourishment for the term infant [1]

  • Peptide profiling by mass spectrometry identified a total of 5,264 unique peptides deriving from human and bovine milk proteins (14,413 when counting modification variants) across all human milk, Human milk fortifiers (HMFs), and gastric samples

  • Peptides from both human milk proteins and bovine fortifier proteins increased from the undigested feed to the stomach

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Summary

Introduction

Human milk composition is evolutionarily optimized to provide essential nourishment for the term infant [1]. Human milk proteins provide a balanced source of amino acids that are essential for the infant’s rapid growth. Milk proteins provide more than the ideal amino acids for infants. Digestion of mother’s milk and fortifier proteins in the infant stomach design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript

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