4.7 Article

Influence of seasonal variation and processing on protein glycation and oxidation in regular and hay milk

Journal

FOOD CHEMISTRY
Volume 337, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.foodchem.2020.127690

Keywords

Hay milk; Maillard reaction; Oxidation; Seasonal variation; Thermal processing

Funding

  1. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft [INST 268/289-1, INST 268/387-1]
  2. European Fund for Regional Structure Development (EFRE, European Union)
  3. European Fund for Regional Structure Development (EFRE, Free State Saxony) [100092961, 100146238]

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Climate and feeding impact the composition of bovine milk, which is further altered by thermal treatment inducing oxidation and Maillard reactions. This study found similarities in protein modifications between regular and hay milk, as well as comparable effects of pasteurization and UHT treatment on both milk types. In particular, UHT treatment led to increased identification of modifications and relative quantities of lactosylated peptides.
Climate and feeding influence the composition of bovine milk, which is further affected by thermal treatment inducing oxidation and Maillard reactions. This study aimed to evaluate season- and processing-related changes in the modified proteome of milk from two different feeding systems. Therefore, tryptic digests of regular and hay milk were analyzed by targeting 26 non-enzymatic modifications using LC-MS. Forty-five glycated, 48 advanced glycation endproduct (AGE-) modified, and 20 oxidized/carbonylated peptides representing 44 proteins were identified with lactosylation, formyllysine, and carboxymethyllysine being most common. The numbers and quantities of glycation- and oxidation-related modifications were similar between regular and hay milk and among seasons. The effects of pasteurization and ultra-high temperature (UHT) treatment were comparable for both milk types. In particular UHT treatment increased the numbers of identified modifications and the relative quantities of lactosylated peptides. The number of identified AGE-modified and oxidized residues increased slightly after UHT-treatment, but the contents were stable.

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