Exosomes of pasteurized milk: potential pathogens of Western diseases

Abstract Milk consumption is a hallmark of western diet. According to common believes, milk consumption has beneficial effects for human health. Pasteurization of cow’s milk protects thermolabile vitamins and other organic compounds including bioactive and bioavailable exosomes and extracellular ves...

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Main Authors: Bodo C. Melnik, Gerd Schmitz
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2019-01-01
Series:Journal of Translational Medicine
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12967-018-1760-8
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spelling doaj-93507ab1c3774ef2b94fffccea90c42b2020-11-25T01:40:14ZengBMCJournal of Translational Medicine1479-58762019-01-0117113310.1186/s12967-018-1760-8Exosomes of pasteurized milk: potential pathogens of Western diseasesBodo C. Melnik0Gerd Schmitz1Department of Dermatology, Environmental Medicine and Health Theory, University of OsnabrückInstitute for Clinical Chemistry and Laboratory Medicine, University Hospital Regensburg, University of RegensburgAbstract Milk consumption is a hallmark of western diet. According to common believes, milk consumption has beneficial effects for human health. Pasteurization of cow’s milk protects thermolabile vitamins and other organic compounds including bioactive and bioavailable exosomes and extracellular vesicles in the range of 40–120 nm, which are pivotal mediators of cell communication via systemic transfer of specific micro-ribonucleic acids, mRNAs and regulatory proteins such as transforming growth factor-β. There is compelling evidence that human and bovine milk exosomes play a crucial role for adequate metabolic and immunological programming of the newborn infant at the beginning of extrauterine life. Milk exosomes assist in executing an anabolic, growth-promoting and immunological program confined to the postnatal period in all mammals. However, epidemiological and translational evidence presented in this review indicates that continuous exposure of humans to exosomes of pasteurized milk may confer a substantial risk for the development of chronic diseases of civilization including obesity, type 2 diabetes mellitus, osteoporosis, common cancers (prostate, breast, liver, B-cells) as well as Parkinson’s disease. Exosomes of pasteurized milk may represent new pathogens that should not reach the human food chain.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12967-018-1760-8B cell lymphomaBreast cancerCow’s milkDiabetes mellitusExosomesHepatocellular carcinoma
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Bodo C. Melnik
Gerd Schmitz
spellingShingle Bodo C. Melnik
Gerd Schmitz
Exosomes of pasteurized milk: potential pathogens of Western diseases
Journal of Translational Medicine
B cell lymphoma
Breast cancer
Cow’s milk
Diabetes mellitus
Exosomes
Hepatocellular carcinoma
author_facet Bodo C. Melnik
Gerd Schmitz
author_sort Bodo C. Melnik
title Exosomes of pasteurized milk: potential pathogens of Western diseases
title_short Exosomes of pasteurized milk: potential pathogens of Western diseases
title_full Exosomes of pasteurized milk: potential pathogens of Western diseases
title_fullStr Exosomes of pasteurized milk: potential pathogens of Western diseases
title_full_unstemmed Exosomes of pasteurized milk: potential pathogens of Western diseases
title_sort exosomes of pasteurized milk: potential pathogens of western diseases
publisher BMC
series Journal of Translational Medicine
issn 1479-5876
publishDate 2019-01-01
description Abstract Milk consumption is a hallmark of western diet. According to common believes, milk consumption has beneficial effects for human health. Pasteurization of cow’s milk protects thermolabile vitamins and other organic compounds including bioactive and bioavailable exosomes and extracellular vesicles in the range of 40–120 nm, which are pivotal mediators of cell communication via systemic transfer of specific micro-ribonucleic acids, mRNAs and regulatory proteins such as transforming growth factor-β. There is compelling evidence that human and bovine milk exosomes play a crucial role for adequate metabolic and immunological programming of the newborn infant at the beginning of extrauterine life. Milk exosomes assist in executing an anabolic, growth-promoting and immunological program confined to the postnatal period in all mammals. However, epidemiological and translational evidence presented in this review indicates that continuous exposure of humans to exosomes of pasteurized milk may confer a substantial risk for the development of chronic diseases of civilization including obesity, type 2 diabetes mellitus, osteoporosis, common cancers (prostate, breast, liver, B-cells) as well as Parkinson’s disease. Exosomes of pasteurized milk may represent new pathogens that should not reach the human food chain.
topic B cell lymphoma
Breast cancer
Cow’s milk
Diabetes mellitus
Exosomes
Hepatocellular carcinoma
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12967-018-1760-8
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