
In infant nutrition, this translates into formulas and functional foods capable of adapting to specific needs from the earliest stages of life.
Genetics, epigenetics and the study of the microbiota open the door to precision nutrition that seeks to optimise cognitive, immunological and metabolic development.
This approach has direct implications for dairy. Milk and dairy products contain concentrated proteins, lipids and carbohydrates with high bioavailability and a proven role in child development. Biotechnology now makes it possible to isolate, optimise and combine these components with greater specificity, raising the standard of efficacy and safety.
Caseins, whey proteins, bioactive peptides and lipid fractions can be modified or selected to fulfil specific functions: from improving digestibility to modulating immune response.
For infant formulas, this means greater functional similarity to human milk and an increasing ability to adapt to different nutritional profiles. For the dairy chain as a whole, it means added value, differentiation and a closer relationship with applied science.
Here, the dairy tradition – historically linked to fermentation – finds a competitive advantage. Biotechnology does not replace this know-how: it amplifies it. The ability to control processes, standardise results and demonstrate clinical impact is increasingly a market requirement.
Clinical trials, scientific validation and clear communication are necessary conditions to sustain the confidence of health professionals and consumers.
For dairy companies, this means investing not only in R&D, but also in regulatory capabilities and partnerships with research centres. Biotechnology accelerates the pace of innovation, but also raises the bar.
The response is not defensive. It is strategic. The dairy industry has raw materials, production know-how and nutritional legitimacy. Integrating biotechnology is a way to protect and project that capital.
In a context where personalisation and evidence are gaining ground, milk and dairy products have the opportunity to position themselves as high-precision nutritional platforms.
Biotechnology does not displace the dairy industry: it forces it to evolve. And in doing so, it opens up a new frontier of growth.
Source : Dairynews7x7 Dec 20th 2025 shared article from our partner channel edairynews.com