AI Article Synopsis

  • The Halari donkey breed, an indigenous Indian species, is facing a rapid decline in population.
  • Their milk is similar to human milk, offering benefits like probiotic diversity and lower allergenic properties, particularly useful for infants allergic to cow or buffalo milk.
  • This study successfully isolated DNA from the milk somatic cells of Halari donkeys and confirmed the presence of the k-casein gene, demonstrating the potential for non-invasive DNA extraction in further molecular research.

Article Abstract

Halari donkey breed is one of the indigenous breeds of India and its population is rapidly decreasing. The Jenny milk is more similar to human milk, exhibits a wide range of probiotic diversity and hypo-allergenicity, especially among infants suffering from cow and buffalo milk protein allergy. Some studies indicated low levels of κ-casein fraction of casein protein in donkey milk. The k-casein gene was not amplified from the DNA derived from the milk somatic cells of Halari donkeys. The Halari donkey milk has low somatic cells count. We report the first isolation of DNA from milk somatic cells of Halari donkeys with subsequent characterization of k-casein gene. Through our work, we showed that the milk somatic cells can be used as a non-invasive source for DNA isolation towards molecular studies. It also proved the presence of k-casein gene in Halari donkey milk by its amplification from isolated DNA.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10830531PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.heliyon.2024.e24991DOI Listing

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