Abstract Human milk is a complex fluid that has developed to satisfy the nutritional requirements of infants. In addition to proteins, lipids, carbohydrates and other biologically active components, breast milk contains a diverse microbiome that is presumed to colonize the infant gastrointestinal tract and a heterogeneous population of cells with unclear physiological roles and health implications. Noteworthy cellular components of breast milk include progenitor/stem cells. This review summarizes the current state of knowledge of breast milk cells, including leukocytes, epithelial cells, stem cells and potentially probiotic bacteria
Human milk is generally considered to be the gold standard of nutrition for healthy human infants. I...
Human milk has been traditionally considered sterile: however, recent studies have shown that it rep...
Recently, breastmilk has been observed to be an ideal source of stem cells. Here, different cellular...
Mammary stem cells have been extensively studied as a system to delineate the pathogenesis and treat...
Human milk (HM) is the gold standard for infant nutrition during the first months of life. Beyond it...
Human milk (HM) is considered the most complete food for infants as its nutritional composition is s...
Human breast milk (HBM) is not only an indispensable source of nutrients for early human growth and ...
<p>The lactating mammary gland contains a stem cells population with multilineage potentialities. Re...
Human breast milk not only has nutritional properties but also holds a functional role. It contains ...
Each mammal produces milk specific to its newborn that meets all nutritional needs. Breast milk is n...
Recent studies have demonstrated that breast milk contains a population of cells displaying many of ...
Background: The benefits of breast milk are well described, yet the mechanistic details related to h...
Breastmilk is chock-full of nutrients, immunological factors, and cells that aid infant development....
The presence of bacteria in human milk has been acknowledged since the seventies. For a long time, m...
At the beginning of the twenty-first century, microbiological studies on human milk started to descr...
Human milk is generally considered to be the gold standard of nutrition for healthy human infants. I...
Human milk has been traditionally considered sterile: however, recent studies have shown that it rep...
Recently, breastmilk has been observed to be an ideal source of stem cells. Here, different cellular...
Mammary stem cells have been extensively studied as a system to delineate the pathogenesis and treat...
Human milk (HM) is the gold standard for infant nutrition during the first months of life. Beyond it...
Human milk (HM) is considered the most complete food for infants as its nutritional composition is s...
Human breast milk (HBM) is not only an indispensable source of nutrients for early human growth and ...
<p>The lactating mammary gland contains a stem cells population with multilineage potentialities. Re...
Human breast milk not only has nutritional properties but also holds a functional role. It contains ...
Each mammal produces milk specific to its newborn that meets all nutritional needs. Breast milk is n...
Recent studies have demonstrated that breast milk contains a population of cells displaying many of ...
Background: The benefits of breast milk are well described, yet the mechanistic details related to h...
Breastmilk is chock-full of nutrients, immunological factors, and cells that aid infant development....
The presence of bacteria in human milk has been acknowledged since the seventies. For a long time, m...
At the beginning of the twenty-first century, microbiological studies on human milk started to descr...
Human milk is generally considered to be the gold standard of nutrition for healthy human infants. I...
Human milk has been traditionally considered sterile: however, recent studies have shown that it rep...
Recently, breastmilk has been observed to be an ideal source of stem cells. Here, different cellular...