Litcius/Paper detail

The impact of thermal processing on the simulated infant gastrointestinal digestion, bactericidal and anti-inflammatory activity of bovine lactoferrin – An in vitro study

David Goulding, Karine Vidal, Lionel Bovetto, Jonathan O’Regan, Nora M. O’Brien, James A. O’Mahony

2021Food Chemistry27 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Lactoferrin (LF) is a multifunctional glycoprotein which, when thermally processed, undergoes significant physicochemical changes. The link between such changes and the bioactivity of LF is not well characterised and requires much research. In this work, bovine LF solutions (1%, w/v, protein, pH 7) were thermally processed using high temperature short time conditions (72, 80, 85 or 95 °C with 15 s holding times). Following this, it was shown that LF and heat induced LF aggregates were largely resistant to simulated infant gastric, but not intestinal, digestion. Also, the efficacy of LF bactericidal activity, and inhibition of lipopolysaccharide-induced NF-κB activation were negatively impacted by thermal processing. This study confirmed that the efficacy of LF bio-functionalities was affected by the extent of heat-induced changes in protein structure whereby processing conditions of least severity (i.e. pasteurisation) had the least impact on bioactivity.

Topics & Concepts

LactoferrinChemistryIn vitroPasteurizationFood scienceDigestion (alchemy)GlycoproteinLipopolysaccharideMicrobiologyBiochemistryChromatographyImmunologyBiologyInfant Nutrition and HealthClinical Nutrition and GastroenterologyViral gastroenteritis research and epidemiology