TY - JOUR
T1 - Milk-Derived Amadori Products in Feces of Formula-Fed Infants
AU - Sillner, Nina
AU - Walker, Alesia
AU - Hemmler, Daniel
AU - Bazanella, Monika
AU - Heinzmann, Silke S.
AU - Haller, Dirk
AU - Schmitt-Kopplin, Philippe
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
Copyright © 2019 American Chemical Society.
PY - 2019/6/17
Y1 - 2019/6/17
N2 - Food processing of infant formula alters chemical structures, including the formation of Maillard reaction products between proteins and sugars. We detected early Maillard reaction products, so-called Amadori products, in stool samples of formula-fed infants. In total, four Amadori products (N-deoxylactulosyllysine, N-deoxyfructosyllysine, N-deoxylactulosylleucylisoleucine, N-deoxyfructosylleucylisoleucine) were identified by a combination of complementary nontargeted and targeted metabolomics approaches. Chemical structures were confirmed by preparation and isolation of reference compounds, LC-MS/MS, and NMR. The leucylisoleucine Amadori compounds, which most likely originate from β-lactoglobulin, were excreted throughout the first year of life in feces of formula-fed infants but were absent in feces of breastfed infants. Despite high inter- and intraindividual differences of Amadori products in the infants' stool, solid food introduction resulted in a continuous decrease, proving infant formula as the major source of the excreted Amadori products.
AB - Food processing of infant formula alters chemical structures, including the formation of Maillard reaction products between proteins and sugars. We detected early Maillard reaction products, so-called Amadori products, in stool samples of formula-fed infants. In total, four Amadori products (N-deoxylactulosyllysine, N-deoxyfructosyllysine, N-deoxylactulosylleucylisoleucine, N-deoxyfructosylleucylisoleucine) were identified by a combination of complementary nontargeted and targeted metabolomics approaches. Chemical structures were confirmed by preparation and isolation of reference compounds, LC-MS/MS, and NMR. The leucylisoleucine Amadori compounds, which most likely originate from β-lactoglobulin, were excreted throughout the first year of life in feces of formula-fed infants but were absent in feces of breastfed infants. Despite high inter- and intraindividual differences of Amadori products in the infants' stool, solid food introduction resulted in a continuous decrease, proving infant formula as the major source of the excreted Amadori products.
KW - Amadori products
KW - Maillard reaction
KW - fructosyllysine
KW - infant formula
KW - metabolomics
KW - milk marker
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85069862080&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1021/acs.jafc.9b01889
DO - 10.1021/acs.jafc.9b01889
M3 - Article
C2 - 31264412
AN - SCOPUS:85069862080
SN - 0021-8561
VL - 67
SP - 8061
EP - 8069
JO - Journal of agricultural and food chemistry
JF - Journal of agricultural and food chemistry
IS - 28
ER -