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research article

Impact of breast-feeding and high- and low-protein formula on the metabolism and growth of infants from overweight and obese mothers

Martin, Francois-Pierre J.
•
Moco, Sofia
•
Montoliu, Ivan
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2014
Pediatric Research

BACKGROUND: The combination of maternal obesity in early pregnancy and high protein intake in infant formula feeding might predispose to obesity risk in later life. METHODS: This study assesses the impact of breast- or formula-feeding (differing in protein content by 1.65 or 2.7g/100 kcal) on the metabolism of term infants from overweight and obese mothers. From birth to 3 mo of age, infants received exclusively either breast- or starter formula-feeding and until 6 mo, exclusively either a formula designed for this study or breast-feeding. From 6 to 12 mo, infants received complementary weaning food. Metabonomics was conducted on the infants' urine and stool samples collected at the age of 3, 6, and 12 mo. RESULTS: Infant formula-feeding resulted in higher protein-derived short-chain fatty acids and amino acids in stools. Urine metabonomics revealed a relationship between bacterial processing of dietary proteins and host protein metabolism stimulated with increasing protein content in the formula. Moreover, formula-fed infants were metabolically different from breast-fed infants, at the level of lipid and energy metabolism (carnitines, ketone bodies, and Krebs cycle). CONCLUSION: Noninvasive urine and stool metabolic monitoring of responses to early nutrition provides relevant readouts to assess nutritional requirements for infants' growth.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1038/pr.2013.250
Web of Science ID

WOS:000333139400009

Author(s)
Martin, Francois-Pierre J.
Moco, Sofia
Montoliu, Ivan
Collino, Sebastian
Da Silva, Laeticia
Rezzi, Serge
Prieto, Ruth
Kussmann, Martin
Inostroza, Jaime
Steenhout, Philippe
Date Issued

2014

Publisher

Nature Publishing Group

Published in
Pediatric Research
Volume

75

Issue

4

Start page

535

End page

543

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
SV  
Available on Infoscience
May 2, 2014
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/103101
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