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Maximally Expressed miRNAs of Milk in Cells, Plasma and Lipid Fraction of Human Milk and Antibodies-Abzymes Catalyzing Their Hydrolysis.

Human milk provides neonates with various components that ensure newborns' growth, including protection from bacterial and viral infections. In neonates, the biological functions of many breast milk components can be very different compared with their functions in the body fluids of healthy adults. Catalytic antibodies-abzymes hydrolyzing peptides, proteins, DNAs, RNAs, and oligosaccharides were detected not only in the blood sera of autoimmune patients but also in human milk. Non-coding microRNAs (18-25 nucleotides) are intra- and extra-cellular molecules of different human fluids. MiRNAs possess many different biological functions, including regulating several hundred genes. Five of them: miR-148a-3p, miR-200c-3p, miR-378a-3p, miR-146b-5p and let-7f-5p were previously found in milk in increased concentrations. Here, we determined number of copies of these miRNAs in 1 mg of analyzed cells, lipid fractions, and plasmas of human milk samples. The relative amount of microRNA decreases in the following order: cells » lipid fraction > plasma. IgGs and sIgAs were isolated from milk plasma, and their activity in the hydrolysis of five microRNAs was compared. In general, sIgAs demonstrated higher miRNA-hydrolyzing activity than IgGs antibodies. The hydrolysis of five microRNAs by sIgAs and IgGs was site-specific. The relative activity of each microRNA hydrolysis was very dependent on the milk preparation. The correlation coefficients between the content of five RNAs in milk plasma and the relative activity of sIgAs than IgGs in their hydrolysis strongly depended on individual microRNA and changed from -0.01 to 0.80. Thus, it was shown that milk contains specific antibodies-abzymes hydrolyzing microRNAs specific for human milk.

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