Login / Signup

Facile and Green Production of Human Milk Fat Substitute through Rhodococcus opacus Fermentation.

Lin-Shang ZhangMei-Yun ChuMin-Hua ZongJi-Guo YangWen-Yong Lou
Published in: Journal of agricultural and food chemistry (2020)
Human milk fat substitute (HMFS) is a class of structured lipids widely used in infant formulas. Herein, HMFS was prepared by Rhodococcus opacus fermentation. The substrate oils suitable for HMFS production were coconut oil (66.1-57.5%), soybean oil (17.5-26.5%), high oleic acid sunflower oil (5.4-4.5%), Antarctic krill oil (9-9.5%), and fungal oil (2%). Six HMFSs were prepared, among which HMFS V and VI were similar to human milk fat from Chinese in terms of fatty acid composition and triacylglycerol species. The sn-2 position of HMFS was occupied by palmitic acid (49.31 and 43.48% in HMFS V and VI, respectively). The major triacylglycerols were OPL, OPO, and LPL, accounting for 15.90, 9.49, and 6.84 and 17.52, 8.44, and 8.55% in HMFS V and VI, respectively. This study is the first to prepare structured lipids intended for infant formula through fermentation, providing a novel strategy for the edible oil industry.
Keyphrases
  • human milk
  • fatty acid
  • low birth weight
  • preterm infants
  • adipose tissue
  • saccharomyces cerevisiae
  • lactic acid
  • quantum dots
  • highly efficient
  • genetic diversity