| Literature DB >> 28554622 |
Wen-Li Wang1, Wei Wang1, Ya-Min Du1, Hong Wu2, Xiao-Bo Yu3, Ke-Ping Ye3, Chun-Bao Li3, Yong-Sam Jung4, Ying-Juan Qian4, Josef Voglmeir5, Li Liu6.
Abstract
Health differences between breast- and formula-fed infants have long been apparent despite great efforts in improving the function of baby formula by adjusting the levels of various milk nutritional components. However, the N-glycome, a type of oligosaccharide decorating a diverse range of proteins, has not been extensively studied in milk regarding its biological function. In this study, the anti-pathogenic function of the enzymatically released human and bovine milk N-glycome against 5 food-borne pathogens was investigated. The human milk N-glycome showed significantly higher activity than bovine milk. After enzymatic defucosylation of human and bovine N-glycan pool, UHPLC peak shifts were observed in both suggesting heavy fucosylation of samples. Furthermore, the anti-pathogenic activity of the defulosylated N-glycome decreased significantly, and the significance of functional difference between the two almost disappeared. This result indicates the essential role of fucosylation for the anti-pathogenic function of the milk N-glycome, especially in human milk.Entities:
Keywords: Defucosylation; Human versus bovine milk; Milk N-glycome; anti-pathogenic activity
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28554622 DOI: 10.1016/j.foodchem.2017.05.026
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Food Chem ISSN: 0308-8146 Impact factor: 7.514