Doerfler Rose, Yerneni Saigopalakrishna, LoPresti Samuel, Chaudhary Namit, Newby Alexandra, Melamed Jilian R, Malaney Angela, Whitehead Kathryn A
Department of Chemical Engineering, Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA.
Department of Biomedical Engineering, Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA.
FASEB J. 2025 Jan 31;39(2):e70340. doi: 10.1096/fj.202402365R.
Milk is a multifaceted biofluid that is essential for infant nutrition and development, yet its cellular and bioactive components, particularly maternal milk cells, remain understudied. Early research on milk cells indicated that they cross the infant's intestinal barrier and accumulate within systemic organs. However, due to the absence of modern analytical techniques, these studies were limited in scope and mechanistic analysis. To overcome this knowledge gap, we have investigated the transintestinal transport of milk cells and components in pups over a 21-day period. Studies employed a mT/mG foster nursing model in which milk cells express a membrane-bound fluorophore, tdTomato. Using flow cytometry, we tracked the transport of milk cell-derived components across local and systemic tissues, including the intestines, blood, thymus, mesenteric lymph nodes, and liver. These experiments identified milk-derived fluorescent signals in intestinal epithelial and immune cells as well as liver macrophages in 7-day-old pups. However, the minute numbers of macrophages in mouse milk suggest that maternal cells are not systemically accumulating in the infant; instead, pup macrophages are consuming milk cell membrane components, such as apoptotic bodies or extracellular vesicles (EVs). Ex vivo experiments using primary macrophages support this hypothesis, showing that immune cells preferentially consumed EVs over milk cells. Together, these data suggest a more complex interplay between milk cells and the infant's immune and digestive systems than previously recognized and highlight the need for future research on the role of milk cells in infant health.
乳汁是一种多方面的生物流体,对婴儿营养和发育至关重要,但其细胞和生物活性成分,尤其是母乳细胞,仍未得到充分研究。早期对乳汁细胞的研究表明,它们会穿过婴儿的肠道屏障并在全身器官中积聚。然而,由于缺乏现代分析技术,这些研究在范围和机制分析方面受到限制。为了克服这一知识空白,我们在21天的时间里研究了幼崽中乳汁细胞和成分的经肠道运输。研究采用了一种mT/mG寄养模型,其中乳汁细胞表达一种膜结合荧光团tdTomato。使用流式细胞术,我们追踪了乳汁细胞衍生成分在局部和全身组织中的运输,包括肠道、血液、胸腺、肠系膜淋巴结和肝脏。这些实验在7日龄幼崽的肠道上皮细胞、免疫细胞以及肝脏巨噬细胞中发现了乳汁来源的荧光信号。然而,小鼠乳汁中巨噬细胞数量极少,这表明母体细胞不会在婴儿体内系统性积聚;相反,幼崽巨噬细胞正在消耗乳汁细胞膜成分,如凋亡小体或细胞外囊泡(EVs)。使用原代巨噬细胞进行的体外实验支持了这一假设,表明免疫细胞优先消耗EVs而非乳汁细胞。总之,这些数据表明乳汁细胞与婴儿免疫系统和消化系统之间的相互作用比之前认为的更为复杂,并突出了未来对乳汁细胞在婴儿健康中作用进行研究的必要性。