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The mammary gland and neonate mucosal immunity
Authors:Salmon H
Affiliation:Lymphocytes et Immunité des muqueuses, Laboratoire PII, INRA, Nouzilly, France.
Abstract:The passive mucosal protection of neonate mammals is dependent on the continuous supply until weaning of maternally dimeric IgA (monogastric) and IgG1 (ruminants). This lactogenic (humoral) immunity is linked to the gut, the so-called entero-mammary link, because of the translocation of Ig (IgA and IgG1) or the emigration of IgA lymphoblasts from the gut into the mammary gland (MG); on the other hand, studies on the lymphocyte subsets in the MG of artiodactyls sustained the view of a true local immune response, depending on the MG stage development. Accordingly, the increase of the lactogenic immunity may focus on (1) inductor sites (gut and, possibly, the MG), (2) increase in cell traffic from the gut into the MG, and (3) enhancement at the effector site of the Ig production and excretion in milk. A specific mucosal environment (interleukins and hormones) is responsible for IgM/IgA switch, the induction of mucosal homing receptor onto lymphoblasts and mucosal vascular addressins; very few data are available for the mechanism of lymphoblasts recruitment, either IgA or IgG1, although lactogenic hormones have been implicated in the IgA-blasts homing into the mice MG. After weaning, the neonate is able to mount a gut immune response, but the shortage of the suckling period did not seem to be detrimental for its onset. In soyabean allergy, both piglet and calf exhibited gut villus atrophy, gut accumulation of IgA (swine) and IgG1 (cattle) immunocytes, sustaining the view that a specific environment in ruminant is responsible for both IgA and IgG1 production.
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