1. Genotoxicity and neonatal subchronic toxicity assessment of a novel mixture of the human-identical milk oligosaccharides lacto-N-fucopentaose I and 2'-fucosyllactose.
- Author
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Phipps KR, Lynch B, Stannard DR, Gilby B, Baldwin N, Mikš MH, Lau A, and Röhrig CH
- Subjects
- Animals, Disease Models, Animal, Female, Humans, Infant, Newborn, Male, Mutagenicity Tests, Rats, Rats, Sprague-Dawley, United Kingdom, Animals, Newborn growth & development, DNA Damage drug effects, Infant Formula toxicity, Milk, Human chemistry, Oligosaccharides toxicity, Salmonella typhimurium drug effects, Trisaccharides toxicity
- Abstract
Human milk oligosaccharides (HMOs) are a complex group of bioactive molecules largely observed in human breast milk but also occurring in limited amounts in other mammalian milks. Advances in biotechnology have enabled production of human-identical milk oligosaccharides (HiMOs), structurally identical molecules to HMOs found naturally in human milk, intended for addition to infant formula to more closely replicate breast milk. Biosynthesis of a novel mixture of two major HMOs, lacto-N-fucopentaose I and 2'-fucosyllactose (LNFP-I/2'-FL), recently became possible. To support the safety of LNFP-I/2'-FL for use in infant formula and other foods, it was subject to a safety assessment comprising a bacterial reverse mutation test, an in vitro mammalian cell micronucleus test, and a 90-day oral gavage study in neonatal rats. In the 90-day study (the first HiMO study to include the new endocrine-sensitive endpoints described in the 2018 version of OECD Test Guideline 408), LNFP-I/2'-FL was administered by oral gavage to neonatal rats once daily (from Day 7 of age) for 90 consecutive days, at doses up to 5000 mg/kg bw/day, followed by a 4-week recovery period. Concurrent reference controls received 5000 mg/kg bw/day of the approved infant formula ingredient oligofructose. LNFP-I/2'-FL was nongenotoxic in vitro. The highest dose tested (5000 mg/kg bw/day) was established as the no-observed-adverse-effect level in the 90-day study, as there were no test article-related adverse effects on clinical observations, body weight, food consumption, clinical pathology, and organ weights nor any noteworthy macroscopic or microscopic findings. This supports the safety of LNFP-I/2'-FL for its intended uses in food., (© 2020 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.)
- Published
- 2021
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