Supplementation with a Whey Protein Concentrate Enriched in Bovine Milk Exosomes Improves Longitudinal Growth and Supports Bone Health During Catch-Up Growth in Rats
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
García Martínez, Jorge; Salto González, Rafael; Girón González, María Dolores; Pérez Castillo, Íñigo María; Bueno Vargas, Pilar; Vílchez Rienda, José Dámaso; Linares Pérez, Azahara; Manzano, Manuel; García Córcoles, María Teresa; Rueda Cabrera, Ricardo; López-Pedrosa, José MaríaEditorial
MDPI
Materia
exosomes bovine milk extracellular vesicles
Fecha
2024-11-07Referencia bibliográfica
García Martínez, J. et. al. Nutrients 2024, 16, 3814. [https://doi.org/10.3390/nu16223814]
Patrocinador
Funds provided by Abbott Laboratories S.AResumen
Background: Undernutrition impairs linear growth while restoration of nutritional provisions
leads to accelerated growth patterns. However, the composition of the nutrition provided
is key to facilitating effective catch-up growth without compromising bone quantity, quality, and
long-term health. Methods: We evaluated the role of a whey protein concentrate enriched in bovine
milk exosomes (BMEs) in modulating the proliferative properties of human chondrocytes in vitro
and studied how these effects might impact bone quantity and quality measured as longitudinal
tibia growth, bone mineral content (BMC) and density (BMD), and trabecular micro-CT parameters
in stunted rats during catch-up growth. Results: BMEs promoted proliferation in C28/I2 human
chondrocytes mediated by mTOR-Akt signaling. In a stunting rat model, two-week supplementation
with BMEs during refeeding was associated with improved tibia BMD, trabecular microstructure
(trabecular number (Tb. N.) and space (Tb. Sp.)), and a more active growth plate (higher volume,
surface, and thickness) compared to non-supplemented stunted rats. Positive effects on physis
translated to significantly longer tibias without compromising bone quality when extending the
refeeding period for another two weeks. Conclusions: Overall, BME supplementation positively
contributed to longitudinal bone growth and improved bone quantity and quality during catch-up
growth. These findings might be relevant for improving diets aimed at addressing the nutritional
needs of children undergoing undernutrition during early life.