4.7 Review

Recent perspective on cow's milk allergy and dairy nutrition

Journal

CRITICAL REVIEWS IN FOOD SCIENCE AND NUTRITION
Volume 62, Issue 27, Pages 7503-7517

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC
DOI: 10.1080/10408398.2021.1915241

Keywords

Cow’ s milk allergy; caseins; whey proteins; galectin; pasteurization; dairy cow nutrition

Funding

  1. National Institute of Food and Agriculture Evans Allen funds: 'Molecular Signatures and Regulatory Checkpoints for Animal Health' [NC. X 320-5-19-120.1]

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Cow's milk contains potential allergens in the form of proteins, making some infants, children, and adults allergic to cow's milk. Strict exclusion of milk and other dairy products puts children with cow's milk allergy at higher nutritional risk.
Cow's milk is a highly nutritious biological fluid that provides nourishment and immunity to infants when breastfeeding declines. However, some infants, children, and adults are allergic to cow's milk because milk contains potential allergens in the form of proteins. Casein and whey proteins and their coagulated sub-fractions in the milk such as alpha S-1-casein, alpha S-2-casein, beta-casein, kappa-casein and alpha-lactalbumin, beta-lactoglobulin, bovine serum albumin, immunoglobulins, lactoferrin, respectively are the major etiological determinant of cow's milk allergy (CMA). Moreover, milk processing techniques such as homogenization and pasteurization alter the milk fat and whey protein's molecular structure and serve them as allergens to the immune system of allergic individuals. Strict exclusion of nutrient-rich milk and other dairy products from diet puts children with CMA at higher nutritional risk. Thus, regular nutritional monitoring, the inclusion of protein and mineral-rich supplements as a substitute for cow's milk, management of animal genetics (sheep, goats, buffaloes, camel, mare, donkey, yak), and milk processing to produce non-allergenic milk by inactivating allergic proteins for designer nutrition is essentially required. This review paper details the prevalence, molecular profiling of milk allergens (proteins), body immune response against CMA, consequences of milk processing, treatment, and novel role of galectins as potentially allergy suppressors.

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