Doctors have long
known that infants who are breast-fed contract fewer infections than do those
who are given formula. Until fairly recently, most physicians presumed that
breast-fed children fared better simply because milk supplied directly from the
breast is free of bacteria. Formula, which must often be mixed with water and
placed in bottles, can become contaminated easily. Yet even infants who receive
sterilized formula suffer from more meningitis and infection of the gut, ear,
respiratory tract and urinary tract than do breast-fed youngsters.
The reason, it
turns out, is that mother's milk actively helps newborns avoid disease in a
variety of ways. Such assistance is particularly beneficial during the first
few months of life, when an infant often cannot mount an effective immune
response against foreign organisms. And although it is not the norm in most
industrial cultures, UNICEF and the World Health Organization both advise
breast-feeding to "two years and beyond." Indeed, a child's immune
response does not reach its full strength until age five or so.
All human
babies receive some coverage in advance of birth. During pregnancy, the mother
passes antibodies to her fetus through the placenta. These proteins circulate
in the infant's blood for weeks to months after birth, neutralizing microbes or
marking them for destruction by phagocytes-immune cells that consume and break
down bacteria, viruses and cellular debris. But breast-fed infants gain extra
protection from antibodies, other proteins and immune cells in human milk.
Once ingested,
these molecules and cells help to prevent microorganisms from penetrating the
body's tissues. Some of the molecules bind to microbes in the hollow space
(lumen) of the gastrointestinal tract. In this way, they block microbes from
attaching to and crossing through the mucosa-the layer of cells, also known as
the epithelium, that lines the digestive tract and other body cavities. Other
molecules lessen the supply of particular minerals and vitamins that harmful
bacteria need to survive in the digestive tract. Certain immune cells in human
milk are phagocytes that attack microbes directly. Another set produces
chemicals that invigorate the infant's own immune response.
Antibodies,
which are also called immunoglobulins, take five basic forms, denoted as IgG,
IgA, IgM, IgD and IgE. All have been found in human milk, but by far the most
abundant type is IgA, specifically the form known as secretory IgA, which is found
in great amounts throughout the gut and respiratory system of adults. These
antibodies consist of two joined IgA molecules and a so-called secretory
component that seems to shield the antibody molecules from being degraded by
the gastric acid and digestive enzymes in the stomach and intestines. Infants
who are bottle-fed have few means for battling ingested pathogens until they
begin making secretory IgA on their own, often several weeks or even months
after birth.
The secretory IgA
molecules passed to the suckling child are helpful in ways that go beyond their
ability to bind to microorganisms and keep them away from the body's tissues.
First, the collection of antibodies transmitted to an infant is highly targeted
against pathogens in that child's immediate surroundings. The mother
synthesizes antibodies when she ingests, inhales or otherwise comes in contact
with a disease-causing agent. Each antibody she makes is specific to that
agent; that is, it binds to a single protein, or antigen, on the agent and will
not waste time attacking irrelevant substances. Because the mother makes
antibodies only to pathogens in her environment, the baby receives the
protection it most needs-against the infectious agents it is most likely to encounter
in the first weeks of life.
Second, the
antibodies delivered to the infant ignore useful bacteria normally found in the
gut. This flora serves to crowd out the growth of harmful organisms, thus
providing another measure of resistance. Researchers do not yet know how the
mother's immune system knows to make antibodies against only pathogenic and not
normal bacteria, but whatever the process may be, it favors the establishment
of "good bacteria" in a baby's gut.
Secretory IgA
molecules further keep an infant from harm in that, unlike most other
antibodies, they ward off disease without causing inflammation-a process in
which various chemicals destroy microbes but potentially hurt healthy tissue.
In an infant's developing gut, the mucosal membrane is extremely delicate, and
an excess of these chemicals can do considerable damage. Interestingly,
secretory IgA can probably protect mucosal surfaces other than those in the
gut. In many countries, particularly in the Middle East, western South America
and northern Africa, women put milk in their infants' eyes to treat infections
there. I do not know if this remedy has ever been tested scientifically, but
there are theoretical reasons to believe it would work. It probably does work
at least some of the time, or the practice would have died out.
Several
molecules in human milk besides secretory IgA prevent microbes from attaching
to mucosal surfaces. Oligosaccharides, which are simple chains of sugars, often
contain domains that resemble the binding sites through which bacteria gain
entry into the cells lining the intestinal tract. Thus, these sugars can
intercept bacteria, forming harmless complexes that the baby excretes. In
addition, human milk contains large molecules called mucins that include a
great deal of protein and carbohydrate. They, too, are capable of adhering to
bacteria and viruses and eliminating them from the body.
The molecules
in milk have other valuable functions as well. Each molecule of a protein
called lactoferrin, for example, can bind to two atoms of iron. Because many
pathogenic bacteria thrive on iron, lactoferrin halts their spread by making
iron unavailable. It is especially effective at stalling the proliferation of
organisms that often cause serious illness in infants, including Staphylococcus
aureus. Lactoferrin also disrupts the process by which bacteria digest
carbohydrates, further limiting their growth. Similarly, B12 binding protein,
as its name suggests, deprives microorganisms of vitamin B12. Bifidus factor,
one of the oldest known disease-resistance factors in human milk, promotes the
growth of a beneficial organism named Lactobacillus bifidus. Free fatty acids
present in milk can damage the membranes of enveloped viruses, such as the chicken
pox virus, which are packets of genetic material encased in protein shells.
Interferon, found particularly in colostrum-the scant, sometimes yellowish milk
a mother produces during the first few days after birth-also has strong
antiviral activity. And fibronectin, present in large quantities in colostrum,
can make certain phagocytes more aggressive so that they will ingest microbes
even when the microbes have not been tagged by an antibody. Like secretory IgA,
fibronectin minimizes inflammation; it also seems to aid in repairing tissue
damaged by inflammation.
As is true of
defensive molecules, immune cells are abundant in human milk. They consist of
white blood cells, or leukocytes, that fight infection themselves and activate
other defense mechanisms. The most impressive amount is found in colostrum.
Most of the cells are neutrophils, a type of phagocyte that normally circulates
in the bloodstream. Some evidence suggests that neutrophils continue to act as
phagocytes in the infant's gut. Yet they are less aggressive than blood
neutrophils and virtually disappear from breast milk six weeks after birth. So
perhaps they serve some other function, such as protecting the breast from
infection.
The next most
common milk leukocyte is the macrophage, which is phagocytic like neutrophils
and performs a number of other protective functions. Macrophages make up some
40 percent of all the leukocytes in colostrum. They are far more active than
milk neutrophils, and recent experiments suggest that they are more motile than
are their counterparts in blood. Aside from being phagocytic, the macrophages
in breast milk manufacture lysozyme, increasing its amount in the infant's
gastrointestinal tract. Lysozyme is an enzyme that destroys bacteria by disrupting
their cell walls.
In addition,
macrophages in the digestive tract can rally lymphocytes into action against
invaders. Lymphocytes constitute the remaining 10 percent of white cells in the
milk. About 20 percent of these cells are B lymphocytes, which give rise to
antibodies; the rest are T lymphocytes, which kill infected cells directly or
send out chemical messages that mobilize still other components of the immune
system. Milk lymphocytes seem to behave differently from blood lymphocytes.
Those in milk, for example, proliferate in the presence of Escherichia coli, a
bacterium that can cause life-threatening illness in babies, but they are far
less responsive than blood lymphocytes to agents posing less threat to infants.
Milk lymphocytes also manufacture several chemicals-including gamma-interferon,
migration inhibition factor and monocyte chemotactic factor-that can strengthen
an infant's own immune response.
Several studies
indicate that some factors in human milk may induce an infant's immune system
to mature more quickly than it would were the child fed artificially. For
example, breast-fed babies produce higher levels of antibodies in response to
immunizations. Also, certain hormones in milk (such as cortisol) and smaller
proteins (including epidermal growth factor, nerve growth factor, insulinlike
growth factor and somatomedin C) act to close up the leaky mucosal lining of
the newborn, making it relatively impermeable to unwanted pathogens and other
potentially harmful agents. Indeed, animal studies have demonstrated that
postnatal development of the intestine occurs faster in animals fed their
mother's milk. And animals that also receive colostrum, containing the highest
concentrations of epidermal growth factor, mature even more rapidly.
Other unknown
compounds in human milk must stimulate a baby's own production of secretory
IgA, lactoferrin and lysozyme. All three molecules are found in larger amounts
in the urine of breast-fed babies than in that of bottle-fed babies. Yet breast-fed
babies cannot absorb these molecules from human milk into their gut. It would
appear that the molecules must be produced in the mucosa of the youngsters'
urinary tract. In other words, it seems that breast-feeding induces local
immunity in the urinary tract.
In support of
this notion, recent clinical studies have demonstrated that the breast-fed
infant has a lower risk of acquiring urinary tract infections. Finally, some
evidence also suggests that an unknown factor in human milk may cause
breast-fed infants to produce more fibronectin on their own than do bottle-fed
babies.
All things
considered, breast milk is truly a fascinating fluid that supplies infants with
far more than nutrition. It protects them against infection until they can
protect themselves.
The Author:
JACK NEWMAN founded the breast-feeding clinic at the Hospital for Sick Children
in Toronto in 1984 and serves as its director. He has more recently established
similar clinics at Doctors Hospital and St. Michael's Hospital, both in Toronto.
Newman received his medical degree in 1970 from the University of Toronto,
where he is now an assistant professor. He completed his postgraduate training
in New Zealand and Canada. As a consultant for UNICEF, he has worked with
pediatricians in Africa. He has also practiced in New Zealand and in Central
and South America.
MUCOSAL
IMMUNITY: THE IMMUNOLOGY OF BREAST MILK. H. B. Slade and S. A. Schwartz in
Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology, Vol. 80, No. 3, pages 348-356;
September 1987.
IMMUNOLOGY OF
MILK AND THE NEONATE. Edited by J. Mestecky et al. Plenum Press, 1991.
BREASTFEEDING
AND HEALTH IN THE 1980'S: A GLOBAL EPIDEMIOLOGIC REVIEW. Allan S. Cunningham in
Journal of Pediatrics, Vol. 118, No. 5, pages 659-666; May 1991.
THE IMMUNE
SYSTEM OF HUMAN MILK: ANTIMICROBIAL, ANTIINFLAMMATORY AND IMMUNOMODULATING
PROPERTIES. A. S. Goldman in Pediatric Infectious Diseases.
Questions? (416)
813-5757 (option 3) or drjacknewman@sympatico.ca
or my book Dr. Jack Newman’s Guide to Breastfeeding (called The
Ultimate Breastfeeding Book of Answers in the USA)