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Original Article

Characterisation and quantification of protein oxidative modifications and amino acid racemisation in powdered infant milk formula

, , , , , , & show all
Pages 68-81 | Received 08 Oct 2018, Accepted 27 Nov 2018, Published online: 16 Jan 2019
 

Abstract

Modification of proteins in infant milk formula (IF) is of major concern to the dairy industry and consumers. Thermal treatment is required for microbiological safety, but heat, light, metal-ions and other factors may induce oxidative damage, and be a health risk. In this study protein modifications in IFs were quantified. IFs contained both reducible (disulphide) and non-reducible (di-tyrosine, lanthionine, lysinoalanine) protein cross-links. Dehydroalanine and the cross-linked species lanthionine and lysinoalanine were detected. Protein carbonyls were detected predominantly on high molecular mass materials. Oxidation products of phenylalanine (m-tyrosine), tryptophan (N-formylkynurenine, kynurenine, 3-hydroxykynurenine), tyrosine (di-tyrosine) and methionine (methionine sulphoxide) were detected, consistent with amino acid modification. Higher levels of most of the markers of protein modification were present in the hydrolysed protein brand, when compared to the conventional IF samples, indicative of increased damage during additional processing. Significant levels of racemised (D-) amino acids were present. These data indicate that amino acids in proteins in IFs are modified to a significant extent during manufacture, with hydrolysed IF being particularly prone.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.

Additional information

Funding

This work received financial support from the Novo Nordisk Foundation (Laureate grant: NNF13OC0004294 to M. J. D.). Z. C. acknowledges the Chinese Scholarship Council (CSC) for a PhD scholarship (Grant no. 201506170056).

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