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Comparative Lipidomics Analysis of Human and Ruminant Milk Reveals Variation in Composition and Structural Characteristics

Lili Zhao, Jinxuan Zhang, Wupeng Ge, Jun Wang

2022Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry32 citationsDOI

Abstract

In the present study, the different lipidomes between human milk and ruminant milk were compared. The 471, 376, 467, and 87 differential lipids were identified in human versus cow, goat, sheep, and camel groups, respectively. According to multivariate statistical analysis, lipids in human and camel milk were closer but differed from other milk. The distributions of long-chain and polyunsaturated fatty acids of triglycerides (TGs), the proportions of functional TGs (OPO, OPL, and PPO), and many kinds of phospholipids (PLs) (PS, PI, GD, GM3, and Cer) in human milk were similar to those in camel milk. The similar structure of TGs and proportion of PLs in human milk to camel milk might contribute to their similar digestion and bioactivity properties. Camel milk could be considered as a new resource of lipid base for infant formula. Minor PLs should also be considered for designing formula. Our results provide a new sight for humanized lipids in infant formula.

Topics & Concepts

Camel milkFood scienceRuminantLipidomicsPolyunsaturated fatty acidChemistryComposition (language)Cow milkSheep milkBiologyBiochemistryFatty acidCropPhilosophyLinguisticsEcologyAnimal Diversity and Health StudiesInfant Nutrition and HealthFatty Acid Research and Health
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