Human milk oligosaccharides: Every baby needs a sugar mama
University of California, San Diego
Indexed incrossrefpubmed
Abstract
Human milk oligosaccharides (HMOs) are a family of structurally diverse unconjugated glycans that are highly abundant in and unique to human milk. Originally, HMOs were discovered as a prebiotic "bifidus factor" that serves as a metabolic substrate for desired bacteria and shapes an intestinal microbiota composition with health benefits for the breast-fed neonate. Today, HMOs are known to be more than just "food for bugs". An accumulating body of evidence suggests that HMOs are antiadhesive antimicrobials that serve as soluble decoy receptors, prevent pathogen attachment to infant mucosal surfaces and lower the risk for viral, bacterial and protozoan parasite infections. In addition, HMOs may modulate…
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Authors
1Topics & keywords
Topics
Keywords
- Breast milk
- Sialic acid
- Necrotizing enterocolitis
- Breast feeding
- Prebiotic
- Medicine
- Infant formula
- Biology
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