Abstract

Short term tissue biopsy cultures and paired, sera, bile and gastric and intestinal contents from Helicobacter pylori-infected gnotobiotic piglets were tested for the synthesis of H. pylori-specific immunoglobulin (Ig) isotype production by antigen-specific ELISA from post-infection days (PIDs) 2–28. Serum antibody levels in all three Ig isotypes were elevated from baseline values by PID 14, serum IgM levels reached peak levels on PID 14 and by PID 28 bile was strongly positive for IgA and IgG. Intestinal, but not gastric contents from infected piglets, contained IgA-specific antibody from PID 14 onward. Gastric mucosal epithelia adjacent to areas of inflammation in infected but not uninfected control piglets produced readily detectable amounts of porcine secretory component (SC); IgA-positive plasma cells were identified in gastric submucosa and lamina propria in these areas. Culture fluid supernatants, collected from explanted gastric cardia and antra and intestinal ilea of H. pylori-infected piglets had trace amounts of IgA as early as PID 2 in some animals, and strong IgA reactivity in all by PID 28. Supernatants also contained H. pylori-specific IgG by PID 14. A strong gastric lymph node IgA response contrasted with moderate IgA production in mesenteric lymph nodes and spleen. Mucosal biopsy production of H. pylori-specific IgG was more evenly distributed throughout the lymphoid system. These data support the contention that the Ig response to H. pylori is initiated within the gastric compartment and matures over time to a generalized IgA-dominated mucosal and IgG-dominated nonmucosal humoral immune response.

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