The local and systemic antibody response after oral administration of a nonenteropathogenic type 1 fimbriated Escherichia coli O83 strain was followed in nine breast-fed and eight formula-fed infants during their first 15 wk of life. Five breast-fed and six formula-fed infants were followed as controls. E. coli O83 was detected in the stools of colonized infants from d 2 after colonization and persisted in the intestine for up to 26 wk. The percentage of children successfully colonized with E. coli O83 was higher among breast-fed than among formula-fed colonized infants. Also, the O83 bacteria isolated from the breastfed children had a higher capacity to attach to colonic epithelial cells of the HT-29 cell line than those isolated from bottle-fed infants. E. coli O83 IgA and IgM antibodies estimated by ELISA were significantly elevated in the saliva of colonized as compared with control infants 2-7 wk after colonization. IgA antibodies against O83 were also higher in the stool of colonized formula-fed infants than in formula-fed controls. The results suggest that the mucosal immune system of the newborn infant can be triggered early to produce specific antibodies against bacteria colonizing the intestine. © 1991 International Pediatric Research Foundation, Inc.
CITATION STYLE
Lodinová-Zádníková, R., Slavíková, M., Tlaskalová-Hogenová, H., Adlerberth, I., Hanson, L., Wold, A., … Mellander, L. (1991). The antibody response in breast-fed and non-breast-fed infants after artificial colonization of the intestine with escherichia coli O83. Pediatric Research, 29(4), 396–399. https://doi.org/10.1203/00006450-199104000-00013
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