Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
1221282 | Journal of Pharmaceutical and Biomedical Analysis | 2015 | 7 Pages |
•A MS based method was developed to directly measure the αS1-casein (CSN1S1) content in breast milk.•Tryptic CSN1S1 digestion was coupled with liquid chromatography (LC)–MS/MS analysis.•CSN1S1 content varied between 3 to 540 μg/ml in 20 breast milk samples of the first week post-partum.
The caseins comprise a milk protein fraction of high nutritional value and, as more recently discovered, of immunologic relevance. In particular, αS1-casein (CSN1S1) is of interest being a potential autoantigen. So far, the concentration of caseins in human milk was primarily determined by indirect methods. The aim of this study was to directly measure the CSN1S1 content in breast milk using mass spectrometry (MS). The quantification was based on tryptic CSN1S1 peptides with the best response in liquid chromatography (LC)–MS/MS analysis. Targeted experiments allowed both specific and sensitive detection at the low fmol level. For this pilot study, twenty breast milk samples of the first week post-partum were analyzed and contained between 3 and 540 μg/ml CSN1S1. Limitations of CSN1S1 quantification are discussed.
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