Casomorphin
Casomorphin is an opioid peptide derived from the digestion of the milk protein casein.
Health
can break casein down into peptides that have some biological activity in cells and in laboratory animals though conclusive causal effects on humans have not been established.Some practitioners of alternative medicine claim that casomorphin may cause some of the symptoms of autism, and promote casein exclusion diets as a supposed cure, there was a lack of evidence that these diets had any effect.
If opioid peptides breach the intestinal barrier, typically linked to permeability and constrained biosynthesis of dipeptidyl peptidase-4, they can attach to opioid receptors.
Elucidation requires a systemic framework that acknowledges that public-health effects of food-derived opioids are complex with varying genetic susceptibility and confounding factors, together with system-wide interactions and feedbacks.
List of known casomorphins (non-exhaustive)
β-Casomorphins 1–3
- Structure:
- Chemical formula: C23H27N3O5
- Molecular weight: 425.48 g/mol
Bovine β-casomorphins 1–4
- Structure:
- Chemical formula: C28H35N4O6
- Molecular weight: 522.61 g/mol
Bovine β-casomorphin 1–4, amide
- Structure: -NH2
- Chemical formula: C28H35N5O5
- Molecular weight: 521.6 g/mol
Bovine β-casomorphin 5
- Structure:
- Chemical formula: C30H37N5O7
- Molecular weight: 594.66 g/mol
Bovine β-casomorphin 7
- Structure:
- Chemical formula: C41H55N7O9
- Molecular weight: 789.9 g/mol
Human β-casomorphin 7
- Structure:
Bovine β-casomorphin 8
- Structure:
- Chemical formula : C46H62N8O10
- Molecular weight : 887.00 g/mol
Bovine β-casomorphin 9
- Structure:
Produced from both A1 and A2. Opioid agonist, but apparently without the detrimental effect of bBCM7 in cell cultures and animal models, and in fact considered potentially beneficial.
Other bioactive casein-derived peptides
- is beneficial to mice.