Presence and Levels of Galactosyllactoses and Other Oligosaccharides in Human Milk and Their Variation during Lactation and According to Maternal Phenotype

Simone R B M Eussen, Marko Mank, Robert Kottler, Xenia-Katharina Hoffmann, Alexander Behne, Erdmann Rapp, Bernd Stahl, M Luisa Mearin, Berthold Koletzko

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

Among the human milk oligosaccharides (HMOS), the galactosyllactoses (GLs) are only limitedly studied. This study aims to describe the presence and relative levels of HMOS, including GLs, in human milk (HM) according to maternal Secretor and Lewis (SeLe) phenotype and lactation stage. Relative levels of 19 HMOS were measured in 715 HM samples collected in the first 4 months postpartum from 371 donors participating in the PreventCD study. From a subset of 24 Dutch women (171 HM samples), samples were collected monthly up to 12 months postpartum and were additionally analyzed for relative and absolute levels of β6'-GL, β3'-GL and α3'-GL. Maternal SeLe phenotype or HM group was assigned based on the presence of specific fucosylated HMOS. Most HMOS, including β6'- and β3'-GL, were present in the vast majority (≥75%) of HM samples, whereas others (e.g., LNDFH II, 2'-F-LNH and α3'-GL) only occurred in a low number (<25%) of samples. Clear differences were observed between the presence and relative levels of the HMOS according to the maternal phenotype and lactation stage. Absolute concentrations of β6'-GL and β3'-GL were higher in HM group IV samples compared to samples of the other three HM groups. β3'-GL was also higher in HM group II samples compared to HM group I samples. β3'-GL and β6'-GL were stable over lactation stages. In conclusion, presence and levels of HMOS vary according to HM group and lactation stage. Not all HMOS behave similarly: some HMOS depend strongly on maternal phenotype and/or lactation stage, whereas others do not. β3'-GL and β6'-GL were present in low concentrations in over 75% of the analyzed HM samples and showed differences between HM groups, but not between the lactation stages.

Original languageEnglish
Article number2324
Pages (from-to)1-19
JournalNutrients
Volume13
Issue number7
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 6 Jul 2021

Keywords

  • human milk
  • oligosaccharides
  • HMOS
  • galactosyllactoses
  • lactation
  • human milk groups

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