Allergenicity of milk of different animal species in relation to human milk

Journal Title: Advances in Hygiene and Experimental Medicine - Year 2016, Vol 70, Issue

Abstract

Protein content in cow milk (with over 20 proteins, and peptides may also occur as a result of enzymatic hydrolysis) ranges from 2.5% to 4.2% and is about 1.5-2 times higher than in human milk. Its most important allergens are considered to be β-lactoglobulin (absent in human milk) and αs1-casein. The most similar in composition to human milk is horse and donkey milk. It contains considerably more whey proteins (35-50%) than cow milk (about 20%), and the concentration of the most allergenic casein fraction αs1 is 1.5-2.5 g/l. In comparison, the content of αs1-casein in cow milk is about 10 g/l. β-lactoglobulin present in donkey milk is a monomer, while in milk of ruminants it is a dimer. Like human milk, it contains a substantial amount of lactose (about 7%), which determines its flavour and facilitates calcium absorption. The high lysozyme content (about 1 g/l) gives it antibacterial properties (compared to trace amounts in ruminants). Camel milk is also more digestible and induces fewer allergic reactions, because it lacks β-lactoglobulin, and its β-casein has a different structure. It also contains (compared to cow milk) more antibacterial substances such as lysozyme, lactoferrin and immunoglobulins, and furthermore the number of immunoglobulins is compatible with human ones. Goat milk components have a higher degree of assimilability as compared to cow milk. Its main protein is β-casein, with total protein content depending on the αs1-casein genetic variant. Goats with the ‘0’ variant do not synthesize this allergenic protein. Clinical and immunochemical studies indicate, however, that it cannot be a substitute for cow milk without the risk of an anaphylactic reaction.

Authors and Affiliations

Robert Pastuszka, Joanna Barłowska, Zygmunt Litwińczuk

Keywords

Related Articles

Perycyty i ich potencjalne zastosowanie terapeutyczne

Perycyty będące multipotencjalnymi komórkami macierzystymi współtworzą ściany naczyń krwionośnych włosowatych oraz przed– i pozawłosowatych. Komórki są umiejscowione pod błoną podstawną, ściśle przylegając do komórek śró...

The role of resveratrol in the regulation of cell metabolism – a review

Moderate wine drinking is associated with reduced risk of cardiovascular, cerebrovascular and peripheral vascular disease, and reduced risk of cancer. This phenomenon is called the “French paradox”, since it was observed...

The role of the Fanconi anemia pathway in DNA repair and maintenance of genome stability

The Fanconi anemia (FA) pathway is one of the DNA repair systems involved in removal of DNA crosslinks. Proteins which belong to this pathway are crucial to the protection of genetic information, whereas disturbances in...

Inhibitory PARP – podstawy teoretyczne i zastosowanie kliniczne

Polimerazy poli-ADP-rybozy (PARP) to enzymy uczestniczące w podstawowych dla życia komórki procesach. Ich aktywacja w sytuacji uszkodzenia DNA umożliwia poli-ADP-rybozylację odpowiednich białek i wpływa m.in. na systemy...

Download PDF file
  • EP ID EP206123
  • DOI -
  • Views 123
  • Downloads 0

How To Cite

Robert Pastuszka, Joanna Barłowska, Zygmunt Litwińczuk (2016). Allergenicity of milk of different animal species in relation to human milk. Advances in Hygiene and Experimental Medicine, 70(), 1451-1459. https://europub.co.uk/articles/-A-206123