» Articles » PMID: 32605037

Binding and Neutralizing Capacity of Respiratory Syncytial Virus (RSV)-Specific Recombinant IgG Against RSV in Human Milk, Gastric and Intestinal Fluids from Infants

Overview
Journal Nutrients
Date 2020 Jul 2
PMID 32605037
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Oral administration of pathogen-specific recombinant antibodies may help to prevent infant gastrointestinal (GI) pathogen infection; however, to neutralize an infectious agent, these antibodies must resist degradation in the GI tract. Palivizumab, a recombinant antibody specific for the respiratory syncytial virus (RSV), was used as a model for pathogen-specific IgG in human milk. The aim was to compare the remaining binding capacity of palivizumab in milk between three mothers after exposure to an in vitro model of infant gastrointestinal digestion (gastric and duodenal fluids) using ELISA. The neutralizing capacity of palivizumab in pooled human milk, gastric contents, and stools from preterm infants was also evaluated for blocking RSV with green fluorescent protein (RSV-GFP) infection in Hep-2 cells using confocal and inverted microscopy and flow cytometry. The reduction of palivizumab binding capacity in human milk and digested samples was slightly different between mothers. Overall, palivizumab decreased 50% after simulated gastric digestion with pepsin and 62% after simulated intestinal digestion with pancreatin. Palivizumab (2-8 μg/mL) in human milk or stool samples blocked RSV (3.4 × 10 FFU/mL) infection (no syncytia formation on Hep-2 cells) by microscopy. Syncytia formation was detected on Hep-2 cells when RSV was incubated in gastric contents or virus medium with 2-4 μg/mL of palivizumab, but no infection was observed at 8 μg/mL. No fluorescence (absence of infected cells) was detected when palivizumab (100 μg/mL) was incubated in human milk or medium with RSV-GFP (1.1 × 10 FFU/mL), whereas fluorescence increased with the reduced concentration of palivizumab using flow cytometry. These results suggest that undigested and digested matrices could change the binding and neutralizing capacity of viral pathogen-specific antibodies.

References
1.
Demers-Mathieu V, Qu Y, Underwood M, Borghese R, Dallas D . Premature Infants have Lower Gastric Digestion Capacity for Human Milk Proteins than Term Infants. J Pediatr Gastroenterol Nutr. 2017; 66(5):816-821. PMC: 5915911. DOI: 10.1097/MPG.0000000000001835. View

2.
Brandtzaeg P . Mucosal immunity: integration between mother and the breast-fed infant. Vaccine. 2003; 21(24):3382-8. DOI: 10.1016/s0264-410x(03)00338-4. View

3.
Demers-Mathieu V, Underwood M, Beverly R, Dallas D . Survival of Immunoglobulins from Human Milk to Preterm Infant Gastric Samples at 1, 2, and 3 h Postprandial. Neonatology. 2018; 114(3):242-250. PMC: 6217945. DOI: 10.1159/000489387. View

4.
Eibl M, Wolf H, Furnkranz H, Rosenkranz A . Prevention of necrotizing enterocolitis in low-birth-weight infants by IgA-IgG feeding. N Engl J Med. 1988; 319(1):1-7. DOI: 10.1056/NEJM198807073190101. View

5.
Kiewiet M, Dekkers R, Ulfman L, Groeneveld A, de Vos P, Faas M . Immunomodulating protein aggregates in soy and whey hydrolysates and their resistance to digestion in an in vitro infant gastrointestinal model: new insights in the mechanism of immunomodulatory hydrolysates. Food Funct. 2017; 9(1):604-613. DOI: 10.1039/c7fo01537b. View