Composition of the non-protein nitrogen fraction of goat whole milk powder and goat milk-based infant and follow-on formulae
Colin G. Prosser, R.D. McLaren, Deborah A. Frost, Michael Agnew, Dianne Lowry
International Journal of Food Sciences and Nutrition
Abstract
The non-protein nitrogen fraction of goat whole milk powder and of infant and follow-on formulae made from goat milk was characterized and compared with cow milk powder and formulae. Goat milk infant formula contained 10% non-protein nitrogen, expressed as a proportion of total nitrogen, compared with 7.1% for cow milk formula. Goat follow-on formula contained 9.3% and cow 7.4% non-protein nitrogen. Urea, at 30%, was quantitatively the most abundant component of the non-protein nitrogen fraction of goat milk and formulae, followed by free amino acids at 7%. Taurine, glycine and glutamic acid were the most abundant free amino acids in goat milk powders. Goat milk infant formula contained 4 mg/100 ml total nucleotide monophosphates, all derived from the goat milk itself. Goat milk has a very different profile of the non-protein nitrogen fraction to cow milk, with several constituents such as nucleotides at concentrations approaching those in human breast milk.
Extracted Claims
7 claims extracted from this paper into the knowledge graph
Goat milk has a very different profile of the non-protein nitrogen fraction to cow milk
“Goat milk has a very different profile of the non-protein nitrogen fraction to cow milk, with several constituents such as nucleotides at concentrations approaching those in human breast milk.”
Goat milk infant formula contains 10% non-protein nitrogen
“Goat milk infant formula contained 10% non-protein nitrogen, expressed as a proportion of total nitrogen, compared with 7.1% for cow milk formula.”
Goat milk contains 30% urea
“Urea, at 30%, was quantitatively the most abundant component of the non-protein nitrogen fraction of goat milk and formulae.”