Open-access Decoding the relationship between cow’s milk proteins and development of type 1 diabetes mellitus

ABSTRACT

Objective  To analyze in silico the evidence of molecular mimicry between human beta-cell autoantigens and cow’s milk proteins as a potential type 1 diabetes mellitus (T1DM) trigger.

Materials and methods  The in silico analysis was performed using bioinformatics tools to compare the amino acid sequences of cow’s milk proteins (bovine serum albumin [BSA] and beta-lactoglobulin [BLG]) and human beta-cell autoantigens (glutamic acid decarboxylase-65 [GAD-65], insulin, and zinc transporter 8 [ZnT8]). The structural and functional characteristics of the proteins were analyzed to identify potential molecular mimicry mechanisms.

Results  The results of the in silico analysis showed significant sequence similarity between BSA/BLG and GAD-65/human insulin/ZnT8, ranging from 19.64% to 27.27%. The cow’s milk proteins evaluated shared structural features with the beta-cell antigens selected for comparison, indicating a potential for molecular mimicry between these proteins.

Conclusion  The findings of this study provide further evidence for a potential role of cow’s milk proteins in triggering T1DM. The in silico analysis suggests that molecular mimicry mechanisms between cow’s milk proteins and human beta-cell antigens may contribute to the autoimmune response leading to T1DM.

Type 1 diabetes mellitus; cow’s milk; autoantigens; molecular mimicry

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