Milk is one of the most important nutrients for humans during lifetime. Farm animal milk in all its products like cheese and other fermentation and transformation products is a widespread nutrient for the entire life of humans. Proteins are key molecules of the milk functional component repertoire and their investigation represents a major challenge. Proteins in milk, such as caseins, contribute to the formation of micelles that are different from species to species in dimension and casein-type composition; they are an integral part of the MFGM (Milk Fat Globule Membrane) that has being exhaustively studied in recent years. Milk proteins can act as enzymes or have an antimicrobial activity; they could act as hormones and, last but not least, they have a latent physiological activity encoded in their primary structure that turns active when the protein is cleaved by fermentation or digestion processes. In this review we report the last progress in proteomics, peptidomics and bioinformatics. These new approaches allow us to better characterize the milk proteome of farm animal species, to highlight specific PTMs, the peptidomic profile and even to predict the potential nutraceutical properties of the analyzed proteins. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled: Farm animal proteomics.

Farm animal milk proteomics / P. Roncada, C. Piras, A. Soggiu, R. Turk, A. Urbani, L. Bonizzi. - In: JOURNAL OF PROTEOMICS. - ISSN 1874-3919. - 75:14(2012 Jul 19), pp. 4259-4274. [10.1016/j.jprot.2012.05.028]

Farm animal milk proteomics

P. Roncada
Primo
;
C. Piras
Secondo
;
A. Soggiu;L. Bonizzi
Ultimo
2012

Abstract

Milk is one of the most important nutrients for humans during lifetime. Farm animal milk in all its products like cheese and other fermentation and transformation products is a widespread nutrient for the entire life of humans. Proteins are key molecules of the milk functional component repertoire and their investigation represents a major challenge. Proteins in milk, such as caseins, contribute to the formation of micelles that are different from species to species in dimension and casein-type composition; they are an integral part of the MFGM (Milk Fat Globule Membrane) that has being exhaustively studied in recent years. Milk proteins can act as enzymes or have an antimicrobial activity; they could act as hormones and, last but not least, they have a latent physiological activity encoded in their primary structure that turns active when the protein is cleaved by fermentation or digestion processes. In this review we report the last progress in proteomics, peptidomics and bioinformatics. These new approaches allow us to better characterize the milk proteome of farm animal species, to highlight specific PTMs, the peptidomic profile and even to predict the potential nutraceutical properties of the analyzed proteins. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled: Farm animal proteomics.
English
farm animals ; milk ; proteomics ; safety ; quality ; dairy products
Settore VET/05 - Malattie Infettive degli Animali Domestici
Articolo
Nessuno
19-lug-2012
Elsevier
75
14
4259
4274
Pubblicato
Periodico con rilevanza internazionale
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Farm animal milk proteomics / P. Roncada, C. Piras, A. Soggiu, R. Turk, A. Urbani, L. Bonizzi. - In: JOURNAL OF PROTEOMICS. - ISSN 1874-3919. - 75:14(2012 Jul 19), pp. 4259-4274. [10.1016/j.jprot.2012.05.028]
none
Prodotti della ricerca::01 - Articolo su periodico
6
262
Article (author)
si
P. Roncada, C. Piras, A. Soggiu, R. Turk, A. Urbani, L. Bonizzi
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/174114
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