Abstract

Although B cells capable of synthesizing IgG and IgM have been identified in human milk, only IgA synthesis is measured in vitro. These data suggest that milk lymphocyte differentiation is a regulated process and that there may be a specific milk cell factor capable of stimulating differentiation of IgA-bearing B cells. To investigate this possibility lymphocyte/ macrophages from early (≤5 days) and late (≥8 days) milk were incubated and subsequently small aliquots of their cell-free culture media were added to peripheral blood lymphocyte cultures. The release of IgA, IgG, and IgM by the blood lymphocytes in culture was quantitated using double-antibody (Ab) competitive radioimmunoassays. The cell-free media from early (colostral) milk cell cultures significantly stimulated ( P < 0.0001) IgA synthesis and had no effect on the production of IgG or IgM. There was no effect on immunoglobulin production when the milk cell supernate came from cells isolated from more mature milk. Therefore, it is postulated (i) that a soluble mediator(s) of immunologic regulation is released by human milk cells, (ii) that this factor(s) at least in part, explains the peculiar immunologic behavior of human milk cells in vitro, (iii) that this factor(s) is released in greater amounts by colostral cells than by cells in mature milk, and (iv) that human colostrum may play a role in affecting active local immunity in the gastrointestinal tract of the recipient newborn.

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