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This photo provided by the California National Primate Research Center shows a nursing rhesus macaque monkey in 2013. In a study of hundreds of milk samples, researcher Katie Hinde of Harvard University found that nursing rhesus macaque monkeys made different milk for daughters versus sons. Scientific insights to mother’s milk might someday help doctors provide better advice to nursing mothers, or suggest ways to improve infant formula. The studies raise questions for human babies, too, about how to choose the donor milk that’s used for hospitalized preemies, or whether to explore gender-specific infant formula. (AP Photo/California National Primate Research Center, Kathy West)
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This photo provided by the California National Primate Research Center shows a nursing rhesus macaque monkey in 2013. In a study of hundreds of milk samples, researcher Katie Hinde of Harvard University found that nursing rhesus macaque monkeys made different milk for daughters versus sons. Scientific insights to mother’s milk might someday help doctors provide better advice to nursing mothers, or suggest ways to improve infant formula. The studies raise questions for human babies, too, about how to choose the donor milk that’s used for hospitalized preemies, or whether to explore gender-specific infant formula. (AP Photo/California National Primate Research Center, Kathy West)
The studies raise questions for human babies, too — about how to choose the donor milk that’s used for hospitalized preemies, or whether we should explore gender-specific infant formula.
“There’s been this myth that mother’s milk is pretty standard,” said Harvard University evolutionary biologist Katie Hinde, whose research suggests that’s far from true — in monkeys and cows, at least.
Instead, “the biological recipes for sons and daughters may be different,” she told a meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science on Friday.
Pediatricians have long stressed that breast milk is best when it comes to baby’s first food. Breast-fed infants are healthier, suffering fewer illnesses such as diarrhea, earaches or pneumonia during the first year of life and less likely to develop asthma or obesity later on.
But beyond general nutrition, there have been few studies of the content of human breast milk, and how it might vary from one birth to the next or even over the course of one baby’s growth. That research is difficult to conduct in people.
So Hinde studies the milk that rhesus monkey mothers make for their babies. The milk is richer in fat when monkeys have male babies, especially when it’s mom’s first birth, she found.
But they made a lot more milk when they had daughters, Hinde discovered. Do daughters nurse more, spurring production? Or does something signal mom prenatally to produce more?
To tell, Hinde paired with Kansas State University researchers to examine lactation records of nearly 1.5 million Holstein cows. Unlike monkey babies, calves are separated from their mothers early on, meaning any difference should be prenatal.
Sure enough, cows that bore daughters produced about 1.6 percent more milk. Since cows lactate for 305 days, that adds up. More interesting, cows often lactate while pregnant — and those that bore a second daughter in a row produced almost 1,000 more pounds of milk over nearly two years than those that produced only sons, Hinde calculated.
Back to the monkeys — where Hinde found still more differences in the quality of the milk.
Milk produced for monkey daughters contains more calcium, she found. One explanation: Female monkeys’ skeletons mature faster than males’ do, suggesting they need a bigger infusion of this bone-strengthening mineral. Human girls’ skeletons mature faster than boys, too, but there haven’t been similar studies of calcium in human breast milk, Hinde said.
Mothers’ milk even affects babies’ behavior, she said. Higher levels of the natural stress hormone cortisol in milk can make infants more nervous and less confident. But boys and girls appear sensitive to the hormone’s effects at different ages, her latest monkey research suggests.
One previous study of human babies has linked higher cortisol levels in breast milk to cranky daughters, not sons, but Hinde cautioned that testing cortisol reactions at only one point in time could have missed an effect on younger or older boys.
What about boy and girl twins? Hinde can’t answer; the monkeys she studies seldom have twins. Nor can she explain why the animals show these gender differences.
“It’s something highly personalized for that mother and that infant at that time point. That’s an exquisite thing,” Hinde said, who wants to see similar study of human breast milk.
Because high-quality breast milk is particularly important to the most vulnerable infants, she wonders whether premature babies in intensive care might fare better with gender-matched donor milk. Then there’s the formula question.
“We think it’s important — and it’s not — to make different deodorants for men and women, and yet we kind of approach formula as though boys and girls have the same developmental priorities,” Hinde said with a laugh.
(xia AP)