The effect of foster feeding and bottle feeding expressed breast-milk on the susceptibility of guinea-pig infants to influenza virus.
Infant guinea-pigs born to mothers immunized against influenza virus by infection during pregnancy were reared from birth by non-immune foster mothers. As a control for the effects of fostering, a similar group were fostered to immune mothers. Fostering, regardless of the immune state of the foster-mother, increased the susceptibility of the infant to upper respiratory tract infection. Increased susceptibility was associated with ablation of the infants IgM and IgA antibody responses and reduced secretion of transplacentally acquired IgG antibody in nasal secretions. In the reciprocal experiment, infants of non-immune mothers fostered to immune mothers cleared virus more rapidly than their peers who were fed by their own mothers. This protective effect was associated with an enhanced nasal IgM and IgA antibody response. Infants of immune mothers separated from their mothers at birth and hand-reared on a cow's-milk-based formula feed suffered an increased susceptibility to the virus similar to that seen in fostered infants. Addition of a pool of expressed milk from a group of immune mothers, including their own, to the feed of hand-reared infants did not reduce their susceptibility. However, a further group of infants fed a non-cellular whey fraction of the same milk pool secreted significantly lower titres of virus. This increased protection was associated with elevated levels of IgG antibody secretion into nasal washes early in infection.