Qureshi Raabiah, Fewtrell Mary, Wells Jonathan C K, Dib Sarah
UCL Great Ormond Street Institute of Child Health, London, United Kingdom.
Front Nutr. 2024 Jul 3;11:1390232. doi: 10.3389/fnut.2024.1390232. eCollection 2024.
Breast milk is the gold standard for infant feeding. It is a dynamic biological fluid rich in numerous bioactive components. Emerging research suggests that these components, including hormones, may serve as signals between mother and offspring. From an evolutionary perspective, maternal hormonal signals could allow co-adaptation of maternal and offspring phenotype, with implications for their Darwinian fitness. However, a series of steps need to be considered to establish the role of a component as a signal and this systematic review focuses on one step: 'Do maternal factors influence the concentration of milk hormones?'
To systematically review human studies which analyze the association between maternal factors and the concentration of hormones in breast milk.
Three databases were searched for studies reporting the association of maternal factors including body mass index (BMI), weight, fat mass, age, ethnicity, smoking with hormones such as adiponectin, leptin, insulin, ghrelin, and cortisol in breast milk.
Thirty-three studies were eligible for inclusion. Maternal BMI was positively associated with milk leptin (20/21 studies) and with milk insulin (4/6 studies). Maternal weight also displayed a positive correlation with milk leptin levels, and maternal diabetes status was positively associated with milk insulin concentrations. Conversely, evidence for associations between maternal fat mass, smoking, ethnicity and other maternal factors and hormone levels in breast milk was inconclusive or lacking.
Current evidence is consistent with a signaling role for leptin and insulin in breast milk, however other steps need to be investigated to understand the role of these components as definitive signals. This review represents a first step in establishing the role of signaling components in human milk and highlights other issues that need to be considered going forward.
母乳是婴儿喂养的黄金标准。它是一种富含多种生物活性成分的动态生物流体。新出现的研究表明,这些成分,包括激素,可能作为母婴之间的信号。从进化的角度来看,母体激素信号可能使母体和后代的表型共同适应,对它们的达尔文适应性产生影响。然而,要确定一种成分作为信号的作用,需要考虑一系列步骤,本系统综述聚焦于其中一步:“母体因素是否会影响母乳中激素的浓度?”
系统综述分析母体因素与母乳中激素浓度之间关联的人体研究。
检索了三个数据库,以查找报告母体因素(包括体重指数(BMI)、体重、脂肪量、年龄、种族、吸烟)与母乳中脂联素、瘦素、胰岛素、胃饥饿素和皮质醇等激素之间关联的研究。
33项研究符合纳入标准。母体BMI与母乳瘦素呈正相关(20/21项研究),与母乳胰岛素呈正相关(4/6项研究)。母体体重也与母乳瘦素水平呈正相关,母体糖尿病状态与母乳胰岛素浓度呈正相关。相反,关于母体脂肪量、吸烟、种族和其他母体因素与母乳中激素水平之间关联的证据尚无定论或缺乏。
目前的证据与母乳中瘦素和胰岛素的信号作用一致,然而,需要研究其他步骤以了解这些成分作为确定性信号的作用。本综述是确定母乳中信号成分作用的第一步,并强调了未来需要考虑的其他问题。