Chemistry of Human Milk


Human milk is a dynamic, bioactive fluid perfectly adapted to the nutritional, immunological, and developmental needs of the human infant. Its composition changes over time (colostrum → transitional → mature milk) and even within a single feed (foremilk → hindmilk).

1. Average Composition of Mature Human Milk (per 100 mL)

Componentg/100 mLkcal/100 mL
Water87–88 g
Total Energy65–70 kcal
Fat3.5–4.5 g31–40 kcal
Protein0.9–1.2 g4–5 kcal
Lactose6.7–7.8 g27–31 kcal
Oligosaccharides (HMOs)0.8–1.5 gnon-caloric (prebiotic)
Ash (minerals)0.2–0.3 g


2. Major Chemical Components in Detail

A. Milk Fat (3.5–4.5 g/100 mL)

  • 98–99 % triglycerides; high in long-chain polyunsaturated fatty acids (LCPUFAs)
  • Key fatty acids: Oleic (C18:1), Palmitic (C16:0), Linoleic (C18:2), α-Linolenic (C18:3), ARA (arachidonic), DHA (docosahexaenoic) — essential for brain & retina development
  • Fat globules smaller than in cow milk; surrounded by a complex milk fat globule membrane (MFGM) rich in glycoproteins and phospholipids
  • Fat content increases dramatically from foremilk (~1–2 %) to hindmilk (~6–8 %)

B. Proteins (0.9–1.2 g/100 mL — much lower than cow milk)

TypeProportionKey Proteins
Whey proteins (60–80 %)Dominantα-lactalbumin, lactoferrin, lysozyme, secretory IgA (sIgA), serum albumin
Caseins (20–40 %)Minorβ-casein dominant; forms smaller, more digestible micelles

Key bioactive proteins:

  • Lactoferrin – iron-binding, antimicrobial
  • Secretory IgA – first-line immune defense
  • Lysozyme – antibacterial enzyme
  • Haptocorrin – binds vitamin B12

C. Carbohydrates

Lactose (6.7–7.8 g/100 mL) – highest among mammals
Human Milk Oligosaccharides (HMOs) – 3rd most abundant solid component (0.8–1.5 g/100 mL)
  • More than 200 different structures identified
  • Indigestible by infant → feed beneficial gut bacteria (Bifidobacterium infantis)
  • Act as prebiotics, anti-adhesives against pathogens, immunomodulators

D. Minerals & Trace Elements (total ash 0.2–0.3 g/100 mL)

Mineralmg/100 mL
Calcium20–35
Phosphorus12–18
Sodium15–30
Potassium50–70
Magnesium3–4
Zinc0.1–0.3
Iron0.03–0.1 (very low, but highly bioavailable)


E. Vitamins

  • High in vitamin A, E, C (especially in colostrum)
  • Vitamin D low unless mother is supplemented
  • All water-soluble vitamins present in adequate amounts

3. Types of Human Milk Over Time

TypeTimeFatProteinLactoseImmune factors
Colostrum0–5 days2–3 g2–3 g5–6 gVery high (IgA, lactoferrin)
Transitional5–14 daysIncreasingDecreasingIncreasingHigh
Mature milk>2 weeks3.5–4.5 g0.9–1.2 g6.7–7.8 gLower but still significant


4. Quick Comparison: Human Milk vs Cow Milk

This comparison highlights the biological specialization of human milk versus cow milk:

ComponentHuman MilkCow Milk
Energy (kcal/100 mL)65–7060–70
Protein (g/100 mL)0.9–1.23.2–3.8
Lactose (g/100 mL)6.7–7.84.6–5.0
HMOs0.8–1.5 gTrace/none
Whey : Casein ratio60:40 to 80:2020:80
Calcium (mg/100 mL)20–35110–130
Iron bioavailabilityHighLow
Bioactive factorsThousands (HMOs, IgA, etc.)Few
Milk Protein Coagulation: Human vs Cow

Summary

Human milk is not just nutrition — it is a complete biological system. It has lower protein and mineral content than cow milk (protecting immature infant kidneys), higher lactose and unique oligosaccharides for brain growth and gut health, and hundreds of bioactive molecules that provide passive immunity, shape the microbiome, and program long-term health. No infant formula can yet replicate its complexity.


Related Topics
Chemistry of Cow Milk
Chemistry of Buffalo Milk
Chemistry of Goat Milk
Chemistry of Camel Milk
Chemistry of Sheep Milk
Chemistry of Donkey Milk

X

Hi, Welcome to Maxbrain Chemistry.
Join Telegram Channel to get latest updates.
Join Now

Daily
Quiz

Admission Alert ⚠️

✦ B.Sc. All Semester


✦ Organic Chemistry for NEET and JEE


✦ GOC-1 and GOC-2 for NEET and JEE


✦ CBSE: 12th Complete Course Annual Exam 2026


✦ Organic Chemistry for CBSE 12th Board Exam 2026


✦ On Demand Topics


Complete Syllabus | PYQs | MCQs | Assignment


Online Class: 25th November 2025


WhatsApp