Mum's breastmilk changes throughout the day, and it could impact a baby's body clock

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Photo by Rainier Ridao on Unsplash
Photo by Rainier Ridao on Unsplash

The hormones in human breastmilk change throughout the day, according to international researchers who say this likely helps regulate a baby's body clock. The team recruited 38 breastfeeding mothers and took samples of their breastmilk at four different times of the day. Testing these samples, the researchers say some components of the breastmilk changed throughout the day, especially levels of melatonin and cortisol which are involved in body clock regulation. While the researchers note this is early research, they say it's possible that when mothers pump and store their breastmilk, there may be benefits to taking note of when the milk is from when deciding what to feed the baby.

Media release

From: Frontiers

Storing breast milk for specific times of day could support babies’ circadian rhythm

Labelling expressed breast milk could be a way to ensure babies receive important cues at the right time, helping busy mothers support the development of their baby

Blood pressure, body temperature, hormone levels: all these things aren’t static throughout the day. The same may be true for biological compounds found in breast milk, a new study has found. Using expressed breast milk, a team examined fluctuations of hormones like melatonin and cortisol, which impact babies’ circadian rhythm, and proteins that influence development and immunization. The team showed that certain compounds spiked at different times of the day. In a society where not every mother can stay with their baby around the clock, this information might allow for optimized feeding of expressed breast milk, the researchers said.  

Breast milk is the first ‘super food’ for many babies. Full of vitamins, minerals, and other bioactive compounds, it helps build the young immune system and is widely considered the optimal source of infant nutrition. Not all mothers, however, have the opportunity to directly breastfeed multiple times during the day and night, and might use expressed milk stored for later.

Breast milk delivers a variety of cues from the mother to the infant, including signals that are thought to influence babies’ circadian rhythms. The hormones and proteins involved in circadian signaling, however, may vary in breast milk concentration over 24 hours. To learn more about these fluctuations, researchers in the US investigated expressed breast milk samples taken during different times of the day. They published their findings in Frontiers in Nutrition.

“We noted differences in the concentrations of bioactive components in breast milk based on time of day, reinforcing that breast milk is a dynamic food. Consideration should be given to the time it is fed to the infant when expressed breast milk is used,” said first author Dr Melissa Woortman, a recent PhD graduate from the Department of Nutritional Sciences at Rutgers University.

“The timing of these cues would be particularly critical in early life, when the infant’s internal circadian clock is still maturing,” added senior author Prof Maria Gloria Dominguez-Bello, a researcher at the Department of Biochemistry and Microbiology at Rutgers University.

Powerful compounds

The researchers took 10 milliliter breast milk samples from 21 participants at 6am, 12pm, 6pm, and 12am on two different days, which were about a month apart. A further 17 participants provided samples taken at the same times once, resulting in 236 samples included in the analysis. The samples were examined for levels of melatonin, cortisol, and oxytocin – all hormones – as well as immunoglobulin A (IgA), an antibody protein part of the immune system, and lactoferrin, a milk protein. Melatonin and cortisol are involved in the regulation of the circadian rhythm, whereas the other examined components influence intestinal development and gut microbiome dynamics.

They found that some breast milk components, especially melatonin and cortisol, varied over the course of the day. Melatonin peaked at midnight, whereas cortisol was at the highest level in the early morning. “We all have circadian rhythms in our blood, and in lactating mothers, these are often reflected in breast milk,” explained Woortman. “Hormones like melatonin and cortisol follow these rhythms and enter milk from maternal circulation.” The other examined components were mostly stable throughout the day. This might be because they may not be as strongly influenced by signals dictating circadian rhythms.

The team also found that as infants got older, the levels of different compounds in breast milk varied. For example, the levels of cortisol, IgA, and lactoferrin were highest when babies were less than one month old. Higher levels of these compounds likely support immune defense and gut colonization in very young babies.

“When it comes to differences in day/night variations by infant age, this could reflect the stabilizing of the maternal circadian clock that occurs with time after giving birth, as well as the maturing and stabilization of the infant’s circadian rhythm,” Woortman pointed out.

Labels for development

The researchers said their study was not able to account for all potentially relevant demographic factors, including delivery mode and maternal diet, due to sample size. Larger and more diverse cohorts will be needed in the future to ensure the generalizability of these results. In addition, future research should examine how infants respond to the variations observed here.

Still, the findings suggest that feeding expressed milk could be timed to maximize natural biological alignment. This way, circadian signals that support infant sleep, metabolism, and immune development – adaptations shaped through evolution – could be maintained.

“Labeling expressed milk as ‘morning,’ ‘afternoon,’ or ‘evening’ and feeding it correspondingly could help align expressing and feeding times and preserve the natural hormonal and microbial composition of the milk, as well as circadian signals,” Dominguez-Bello pointed out.

“In modern societies where it may not be feasible for mothers to stay with their infants throughout the day, aligning feeding times with the time of milk expression is a simple, practical step that maximizes the benefits of breast milk when feeding expressed milk,” Woortman concluded.

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Research Frontiers, Web page The URL will go live after the embargo ends
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conference:
Frontiers in Nutrition
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Organisation/s: Rutgers University, USA
Funder: The author(s) declare that financial support was received for the research and/or publication of this article. This research was funded by the CIFAR fellowship to MD-B and the Ferring Pharmaceutical COVID-19 Investigational Grant in Reproductive Medicine and Maternal Health (RMMH) to LK.
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