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Efficient in vitro digestion of lipids and proteins in bovine milk fat globule membrane ingredient (MFGMi) and whey-casein infant formula with added MFGMi
Affiliation:1. Comprehensive Cancer Center, Wexner Medical Center, The Ohio State University, Columbus 43210;2. Nutrient and Phytochemical Analytics Shared Resource, Comprehensive Cancer Center, The Ohio State University, Columbus 43210;3. Department of Nutrition, National Institute of Medical Sciences and Nutrition, Tlalpan, Mexico City, 14080, Mexico;4. Reckitt, Mead Johnson Nutrition Institute, Evansville, IN 47721;5. Department of Food Science and Technology, The Ohio State University, Columbus 43210;6. Human Nutrition Program, The Ohio State University, Columbus 43210
Abstract:The relative immaturity of the infant digestive system has the potential to affect the bioavailability of dietary lipids, proteins, and their digested products. We performed a lipidomic analysis of a commercial bovine milk fat globule membrane ingredient (MFGMi) and determined the profile of lipids and proteins in the bioaccessible fraction after in vitro digestion of both the ingredient and whey-casein-based infant formula without and with MFGMi. Test materials were digested using a static 2-phase in vitro model, with conditions simulating those in the infant gut. The extent of digestion and the bioaccessibility of various classes of neutral and polar lipids were monitored by measuring a wide targeted lipid profile using direct infusion–mass spectrometry. Digestion of abundant proteins in the ingredient and whey–casein infant formula containing the ingredient was determined by denaturing PAGE with imaging of Coomassie Brilliant Blue stained bands. Cholesterol esters, diacylglycerides, triacylglycerides, phosphatidylcholines, and phosphatidylethanolamines in MFGMi were hydrolyzed readily during in vitro digestion, which resulted in marked increases in the amounts of free fatty acids and lyso-phospholipids in the bioaccessible fraction. In contrast, sphingomyelins, ceramides, and gangliosides were largely resistant to simulated digestion. Proteins in MFGMi and the infant formulas also were hydrolyzed efficiently. The results suggest that neutral lipids, cholesterol esters, phospholipids, and proteins in MFGMi are digested efficiently during conditions that simulate the prandial lumen of the stomach and small intestine of infants. Also, supplementation of whey-casein-based infant formula with MFGMi did not appear to alter the profiles of lipids and proteins in the bioaccessible fraction after digestion.
Keywords:milk fat globule membrane  in vitro digestion  lipidomics  bioaccessibility  milk polar lipids
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