Dairy bioactive proteins and peptides: a narrative review (bibtex)
by Nancy Auestad and Donald K Layman
Abstract:
Milk proteins are known for their high nutritional quality, based on their essential amino acid composition, and they exhibit a wide range of bioactivities, including satiety, antimicrobial, mineral-binding, and anti-lipidemic properties. Because of their unique water solubility, milk proteins are readily separated into casein and whey fractions, which can be further fractionated into many individual proteins, including alpha-S1- and alpha-S2-caseins, beta-casein, and kappa-casein, and the whey proteins alpha-lactalbumin, lactoferrin, beta-lactoglobulin, and glycomacropeptide. Many of these proteins have unique bioactivities. Further, over the past 30 years, peptides that are encrypted in the primary amino acid sequences of proteins and released along with amino acids during digestion are increasingly recognized as biologically active protein metabolites that may have beneficial effects on human health. This review examines the current state of the science on the contribution of dairy proteins and their unique peptides and amino acids to human health.
Reference:
Dairy bioactive proteins and peptides: a narrative review (Nancy Auestad and Donald K Layman), In Nutr Rev, volume 79, 2021.
Bibtex Entry:
@article{Auestad:2021aa,
	abstract = {Milk proteins are known for their high nutritional quality, based on their essential amino acid composition, and they exhibit a wide range of bioactivities, including satiety, antimicrobial, mineral-binding, and anti-lipidemic properties. Because of their unique water solubility, milk proteins are readily separated into casein and whey fractions, which can be further fractionated into many individual proteins, including alpha-S1- and alpha-S2-caseins, beta-casein, and kappa-casein, and the whey proteins alpha-lactalbumin, lactoferrin, beta-lactoglobulin, and glycomacropeptide. Many of these proteins have unique bioactivities. Further, over the past 30 years, peptides that are encrypted in the primary amino acid sequences of proteins and released along with amino acids during digestion are increasingly recognized as biologically active protein metabolites that may have beneficial effects on human health. This review examines the current state of the science on the contribution of dairy proteins and their unique peptides and amino acids to human health.},
	author = {Auestad, Nancy and Layman, Donald K},
	date-added = {2023-07-23 20:32:07 +0100},
	date-modified = {2023-07-23 20:32:42 +0100},
	doi = {10.1093/nutrit/nuab097},
	journal = {Nutr Rev},
	journal-full = {Nutrition reviews},
	keywords = {Protein Synthesis},
	mesh = {Amino Acids; Caseins; Humans; Lactalbumin; Milk Proteins; Peptides; Whey Proteins},
	month = {Dec},
	number = {Suppl 2},
	pages = {36-47},
	pmc = {PMC8653944},
	pmid = {34879145},
	pst = {ppublish},
	title = {Dairy bioactive proteins and peptides: a narrative review},
	volume = {79},
	year = {2021},
	bdsk-url-1 = {https://doi.org/10.1093/nutrit/nuab097}}
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