| Literature DB >> 32455695 |
Yarden Golan1, Yehuda G Assaraf1.
Abstract
Human milk is considered the optimal nutrition for infants as it provides additional attributes other than nutritional support for the infant and contributes to the mother's health as well. Although breastfeeding is the most natural modality to feed infants, nowadays, many mothers complain about breastfeeding difficulties. In addition to environmental factors that may influence lactation outcomes including maternal nutrition status, partner's support, stress, and latching ability of the infant, intrinsic factors such as maternal genetics may also affect the quantitative production and qualitative content of human milk. These genetic factors, which may largely affect the infant's growth and development, as well as the mother's breastfeeding experience, are the subject of the present review. We specifically describe genetic variations that were shown to affect quantitative human milk supply and/or its qualitative content. We further discuss possible implications and methods for diagnosis as well as treatment modalities. Although cases of nutrient-deficient human milk are considered rare, in some ethnic groups, genetic variations that affect human milk content are more abundant, and they should receive greater attention for diagnosis and treatment when necessary. From a future perspective, early genetic diagnosis should be directed to target and treat breastfeeding difficulties in real time.Entities:
Keywords: Human milk; nutrigenetics; nutrigenomics; nutrition
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32455695 PMCID: PMC7284811 DOI: 10.3390/nu12051500
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nutrients ISSN: 2072-6643 Impact factor: 5.717
Genetic variations that were associated with changes in human milk components, as well as the effect on the infant and suggested treatment. LoF, loss of function; BCRP, breast cancer resistance protein; ABCG2, ATP-driven, multidrug efflux transporter; ITD, iodide transport defect; SNP, single nucleotide polymorphism; HMO, human milk oligosaccharide.
| Gene Name | Protein Name | Effect of Mutations on Human Milk | The Effect on the Infant or Related Disease | Treatment |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| ZnT2 | LoF homozygous mutation in ZnT2 were found in mothers producing zinc-deficient human milk [ | Transient neonatal zinc deficiency (TNZD), a disorder that leads to severe zinc deficiency in exclusively breastfed infants | Zinc supplementation (5 mg/day) and continuing breastfeeding [ |
|
| BCRP | Mothers harboring the c.421C > A polymorphism in ABCG2, secreted threefold more nifedipine to human milk [ | Unknown | |
|
| Sodium iodide symporter (NIS) | Mother carrying homozygous T354P mutation in the NIS transporter was reported to produce iodine-deficient milk. | The mother was diagnosed with ITD, treated with levothyroxine from the age of five years old, therefore, iodine supplementation was given after birth to prevent deficiencies in the infant. | Mother supplementation with 50 mg potassium iodide tablet daily starting on the fifth day postpartum to increase iodine concentration in human milk. |
|
| Methylene tetrahydrof-olate reductase | The MTHFR 677C > T SNP was associated with higher levels of human milk unmetabolized folic acid (UMFA) [ | Unknown | |
|
| Methylene tetrahydrof-olate dehydroge-nase 1 | rs1076991, rs2983733, rs2987981, rs8003379, and rs17824591 SNPs in the methylene tetrahydrofolate dehydrogenase 1 ( | Unknown | |
| Fatty acid desaturase 1/2 | The minor allele homozygotes of rs174553 (GG), rs99780 (TT), and rs174583 (TT) were associated with significantly lower 14:0, arachidonic (ARA, 20:4 ) and eicosapentanoic acid (EPA, 20:5), but higher 20:2 (n − 6) fatty acid in human milk [ | Mothers carrying genetic variants associated with lower FADS1 activity (regulating AA and EPA synthesis), higher FADS2 activity (regulating DHA synthesis), and with higher EPA/AA and DHA/AA ratios in colostrum showed a significant advantage in cognition at 14 months. | ||
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| Fucosyltra-nsferase 2 | Nonsense mutation W143X that introduces a premature stop codon in the FUT2 gene (rs601338) abolished the ability to synthesize | Infants fed by non-secretor mothers, were delayed in the establishment of their gut microbiota, specifically |
Figure 1Schematic illustration of the mechanism of transport of micronutrients in human lactocytes during lactation. ATP-driven, multidrug efflux transporter (ABCG2) [38,154], NIS [51,61], and ZnT2 transporter [21,155] were shown to transport riboflavin (vitamin B2), iodine, and zinc, respectively, in human mammary gland epithelial cells during lactation. The anion transporter TMEM16A is predicted to transport iodine into human milk [47,48].