alpha-Lactabumin - The milk manipulator's dream
R.J. Wilkins
MAF Technology, Ruakura Agricultural Centre, Hamilton, New
Zealand
Proceedings of the New Zealand Society of Animal Production.
1991, 51: 211-218
The properties of the milk serum protein alpha-lactalbumin are
reviewed with special emphasis being placed on its central role in
determining the lactose and water content of milk. Much circumstantial
evidence suggests that artificial depression of alpha-lactalbumin
synthesis should decrease lactose synthesis and that this will, in turn,
decrease the water content of milk. Experimental evidence indicates,
however, that patterns of alpha-lactalbumin gene expression in lactating
ovine and bovine mammary tissue are complex and we should be cautious in
making such predictions. Studies with transgenic mice expressing either
elevated or depressed levels of alpha-lactabumin will be required to
settle this question. In the meantime, a promising line of research is
the investigation of dairy cattle carrying variant alpha-lactabumin
genes. It is possible that correlations will be found between some of
these variants and both the water content and protein yield of milk.
Conceivably, selective breeding of cattle carrying variant proteins may
prove a more practical means of altering alpha-lactalbumin synthesis
than current transgenic techniques.
Keywords: NZSAPAB;
alpha-lactalbumin; lactose; water-content; gene-structure;
transgenics; gene expression; variant-proteins
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Last Updated 25-01-1997