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Protein in Neonatal and Infant Nutrition: Recent Updates. Группа авторовЧитать онлайн книгу.

Protein in Neonatal and Infant Nutrition: Recent Updates - Группа авторов


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or infant formula are essential components of the infant’s diet; therefore, the specific quality, quantity and conformation of proteins are of utmost importance for healthy growth and development.

      © 2016 Nestec Ltd., Vevey/S. Karger AG, Basel

      Proteins, Peptides and Amino Acids: Definitions

      Proteins, from the Greek proetios (meaning ‘first’), are a fundamental component for life. They are the second most abundant chemical compound in the body after water. Following digestion, dietary proteins are absorbed as amino acids, which then contribute to the total amino acid pool, from which the body’s proteins are synthetized. Proteins are the main building blocks of the body and are involved in maintaining numerous body functions, in repairing or replacing cells or tissues, and in growth.

Nonessential amino acids (can be synthetized by the human body) Conditionally essential amino acids (can be synthetized by the human body except in certain conditions) Essential amino acids (cannot be synthetized by the human body; must be supplied through nutrition)
Alanine Arginine Histidine
Aspartate Asparagine Isoleucine
Glutamate Cysteine1 Leucine
Glutamine Lysine
Glycine Methionine
Proline Phenylalanine
Serine Threonine
Tyrosine1 Tryptophan
Valine
1 Requires essential amino acid precursors (methionine and phenylalanine).

      They are polymers, built from 20 different amino acids. The distinction between proteins and peptides is their size. Peptides are chains of 2-30 amino acids and proteins are peptides that consist of more than 30 amino acids. The various properties of peptides and proteins depend not only on their component amino acids and their sequence in peptide chains, but also on the way the peptide chains are stretched, coiled or folded in space in secondary structures. Proteins and large peptides adopt a geometric shape, which is referred to as tertiary structure, and finally many proteins are actually assemblies of several polypeptides, which are known as protein subunits.

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      Protein Needs in Infancy

      The infant’s first year of life is a critical time of rapid growth and development. Growth and development between birth and weaning are crucial for long-term well-being. The rapid growth of the baby (the body weight of a baby doubles by 6 months) must be supported by a high rate of protein synthesis. The rate of protein synthesis and turnover are then exceptionally high in infants relative to their body weight. In the first month of life, they need around 3.5 times as much protein per kilogram of body weight as an adult. Although growth velocity, and thereby protein requirements, rapidly declines during the first 3 months of life, at the age of 4-6 months, infants still need more than 60%, and at 6-12 years around 40% more protein than adults per kilogram of body weight.

      Requirements for proteins are expressed in terms of total proteins and individual amino acids, meaning that both the quantity and the quality of proteins supplied are important.

      Breast Milk

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