Campo Joseph J, Seppo Antti E, Randall Arlo Z, Pablo Jozelyn, Hung Chris, Teng Andy, Shandling Adam D, Truong Johnathon, Oberai Amit, Miller James, Iqbal Najeeha Talat, Peñataro Yori Pablo, Kukkonen Anna Kaarina, Kuitunen Mikael, Guterman L Beryl, Morris Shaun K, Pell Lisa G, Al Mahmud Abdullah, Ramakrishan Girija, Heinz Eva, Kirkpatrick Beth D, Faruque Abu Sg, Haque Rashidul, Looney R John, Kosek Margaret N, Savilahti Erkki, Omer Saad B, Roth Daniel E, Petri William A, Järvinen Kirsi M
Antigen Discovery Incorporated, Irvine, California, USA.
Department of Pediatrics, Division of Allergy and Immunology, University of Rochester School of Medicine, Rochester, New York, USA.
J Clin Invest. 2024 Jun 11;134(15):e168789. doi: 10.1172/JCI168789.
BACKGROUNDThe use of high-throughput technologies has enabled rapid advancement in the knowledge of host immune responses to pathogens. Our objective was to compare the repertoire, protection, and maternal factors associated with human milk antibodies to infectious pathogens in different economic and geographic locations.METHODSUsing multipathogen protein microarrays, 878 milk and 94 paired serum samples collected from 695 women in 5 high and low-to-middle income countries (Bangladesh, Finland, Peru, Pakistan, and the United States) were assessed for specific IgA and IgG antibodies to 1,607 proteins from 30 enteric, respiratory, and bloodborne pathogens.RESULTSThe antibody coverage across enteric and respiratory pathogens was highest in Bangladeshi and Pakistani cohorts and lowest in the U.S. and Finland. While some pathogens induced a dominant IgA response (Campylobacter, Klebsiella, Acinetobacter, Cryptosporidium, and pertussis), others elicited both IgA and IgG antibodies in milk and serum, possibly related to the invasiveness of the infection (Shigella, enteropathogenic E. coli "EPEC", Streptococcus pneumoniae, Staphylococcus aureus, and Group B Streptococcus). Besides the differences between economic regions and decreases in concentrations over time, human milk IgA and IgG antibody concentrations were lower in mothers with high BMI and higher parity, respectively. In Bangladeshi infants, a higher specific IgA concentration in human milk was associated with delayed time to rotavirus infection, implying protective properties of antirotavirus antibodies, whereas a higher IgA antibody concentration was associated with greater incidence of Campylobacter infection.CONCLUSIONThis comprehensive assessment of human milk antibody profiles may be used to guide the development of passive protection strategies against infant morbidity and mortality.FUNDINGBill and Melinda Gates Foundation grant OPP1172222 (to KMJ); Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation grant OPP1066764 funded the MDIG trial (to DER); University of Rochester CTSI and Environmental Health Sciences Center funded the Rochester Lifestyle study (to RJL); and R01 AI043596 funded PROVIDE (to WAP).
背景
高通量技术的应用推动了宿主对病原体免疫反应知识的快速发展。我们的目标是比较不同经济和地理位置的母乳中针对感染性病原体的抗体库、保护作用及母体因素。
方法
使用多病原体蛋白质微阵列,对从5个高收入和中低收入国家(孟加拉国、芬兰、秘鲁、巴基斯坦和美国)的695名女性收集的878份母乳和94对血清样本进行评估,检测针对30种肠道、呼吸道和血源性病原体的1607种蛋白质的特异性IgA和IgG抗体。
结果
孟加拉国和巴基斯坦队列中肠道和呼吸道病原体的抗体覆盖率最高,美国和芬兰最低。虽然一些病原体诱导主要的IgA反应(弯曲杆菌、克雷伯菌、不动杆菌、隐孢子虫和百日咳杆菌),但其他病原体在母乳和血清中同时引发IgA和IgG抗体,这可能与感染的侵袭性有关(志贺菌、肠致病性大肠杆菌“EPEC”、肺炎链球菌、金黄色葡萄球菌和B族链球菌)。除了经济区域之间的差异以及抗体浓度随时间下降外,高BMI母亲的母乳IgA抗体浓度较低,高胎次母亲的母乳IgG抗体浓度较低。在孟加拉国婴儿中,母乳中较高的特异性IgA浓度与轮状病毒感染时间延迟有关,这意味着抗轮状病毒抗体具有保护作用,而较高的IgA抗体浓度与弯曲杆菌感染发生率较高有关。
结论
对母乳抗体谱的全面评估可用于指导针对婴儿发病和死亡的被动保护策略的制定。
资助
比尔及梅琳达·盖茨基金会拨款OPP1172222(给KMJ);比尔及梅琳达·盖茨基金会拨款OPP1066764资助MDIG试验(给DER);罗切斯特大学临床与转化科学研究所和环境健康科学中心资助罗切斯特生活方式研究(给RJL);R01 AI043596资助PROVIDE项目(给WAP)。