PEDIATRICS Vol. 105 No. 1 January 2000, p. e7
From the Division of Neonatology, Department of Pediatrics, University of Florida College of Medicine, Gainesville, Florida.
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ABSTRACT |
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Objective. Human milk provides neonates with a meaningful degree of protection from infection, but the responsible mechanisms are not well understood. Discovering these mechanisms is important, because of the possibility of supplementing infant formulas with factors that simulate human milk's protective capacity. We postulated that granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (G-CSF), a cytokine known to augment antibacterial defenses through its salutory effect on neutrophil production, might be one such factor. To test this hypothesis, we quantified G-CSF in milk of healthy women and those with intraamniotic infection, and sought the presence of functional G-CSF receptors (G-CSF-R) in fetal/neonatal intestinal villi.
Study Design. G-CSF was measured by enzyme-linked immunoassay in 126 milk samples obtained from breast-feeding women, and the concentrations were analyzed according to gestational age, postpartum day of collection (first 2 days vs greater 2 days), and the presence versus absence of intraamniotic infection. G-CSF-R messenger ribonucleic acid transcripts were sought from fetal/neonatal intestine using reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction, and localized using in situ RT-PCR. G-CSF-R protein, and specific intracellular signaling proteins (Janus tyrosine kinase-1, Janus tyrosine kinase-2, and tyrosine kinase-2), were sought by immunohistochemistry.
Results. All milk samples contained G-CSF, and significantly more G-CSF was contained in milk collected during the first 2 postpartum days than during subsequent days. Milk from women who delivered prematurely had less G-CSF during the first 2 postpartum days than milk from women who delivered at term. When intraamniotic infection was present, the concentration of G-CSF in milk was elevated significantly compared with concentrations in milk of noninfected women. G-CSF concentrations were also higher in milk collected during the first 2 postpartum days from women who had received intrapartum recombinant G-CSF treatment, compared with milk obtained from women with intraamniotic infection, regardless if they delivered prematurely or at term. G-CSF-R messenger ribonucleic acid and protein were expressed on fetal villus enterocytes, and Janus tyrosine kinase-1, Janus tyrosine kinase-2, and tyrosine kinase-2 were present within the cytoplasm of these cells.
Conclusions. Human milk contains substantial quantities of G-CSF. G-CSF-R are abundant on villus enterocytes, and specific proteins associated with G-CSF-R signaling are present in these cells. Key words: growth factors, cytokines, hematopoiesis, immunity.
A protective effect of human milk feedings
against bacterial infections in neonates has been reported from
Sweden,1 Guatemala,2 India,3
Bangladesh,4 Australia,5 the United
States,6 and Great Britain.7 However, a
variety of circumstances dictate that human milk is not always available to neonates. It is important to identify the protective factors present in human milk, because infant formulas could
potentially be improved by the addition of such factors. Some of the
immunologic factors passively acquired by human milk feeding already
have been identified. These include immunoglobulins, complement
components, interferon, cytokines, fatty acids, gangliosides,
polysaccharides, glycoproteins, lymphocyte-derived chemotactic and
migration inhibition factors, macrophages, granulocytes, lymphocytes,
and epithelial cells.8
Several of the hematopoietic growth factors have critical host-defense
functions, but little is known about the concentration of these in
colostrum and mature milk during maternal health and disease or about
their potential salutary actions in the neonate.9-11 Sinha and Yunis12 reported that human milk contains hematopoietic colony-stimulating activity when assessed by bioassay but, the precise type of colony-stimulating factor was not identified. Granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (G-CSF), a lineage specific hematopoietic cytokine, influences the proliferation,
differentiation, and survival of neutrophils13-15 and the administration of recombinant G-CSF is being investigated as
a therapy for neonates who have bacterial infection and
neutropenia.16-22 Gilmore et al10 and
Wallace and colleagues11 reported the presence of G-CSF in
human milk using an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA). In these
studies the concentration of G-CSF was reported in only one sample of
preterm human milk and the presence of maternal infection was not
evaluated. We proposed 1) to confirm the presence of G-CSF in term
human milk, and 2) to determine whether such concentrations are
significantly different when women have perinatal infections or deliver
prematurely. We also sought to determine whether receptors for G-CSF
were present in fetal intestine, and if so, whether these were
functional. We considered these studies to be essential steps toward
testing the hypothesis that adding physiologic concentrations of
recombinant G-CSF to infant formulas would improve their ability to
reduce infection.
Participants
Human milk was obtained from breast-feeding mothers who
delivered at term (n = 59) or prematurely
(n = 67) and included those with intraamniotic
infection (n = 12), defined by Gilstrap et al.23 Milk also was obtained either as a single or
multiple-sample collection, the latter over a period of up to 4 weeks
(n = 24). To assess potential variabilities in G-CSF
concentrations associated with the postpartum day of collection, 2 additional subgroups were created: 1) milk collected within postpartum
days 1 and 2, and 2) milk collected after this time. Four mothers, who
delivered at G-CSF ELISA Assay
The aqueous phase of human milk was aliquoted and stored at
Concentration of G-CSF in Human Milk
The concentration of G-CSF in the aqueous phase of human milk
was examined. Samples were centrifuged at ×14 000 g for 30 minutes, and the aqueous fractions were separated from the lipids and solid precipitate. Samples were frozen at Statistics for G-CSF Determinations
Initial descriptive statistics were calculated and analysis of
variance were used to evaluate the relationship between G-CSF concentrations in milk type (colostrum or mature), birth status (premature or term), and intraamniotic infection status (present or
absent). A priori between-group contrasts were then performed with the
Tissue Preparation
Tissues were obtained from human fetuses at 8 to 10, 16 to 18, and 22 to 24 weeks' postconceptual age. Only fetuses that were normal
by ultrasound examination and underwent elective pregnancy termination
were studied. Pregnancy terminations were conducted by suction
curettage (8-16 weeks) or by cervical dilatation and extraction
curettage (17-24 weeks). The investigators were not the physicians
caring for the women and had no input on their decision to terminate
pregnancy.
Some tissues were immediately frozen for RNA extraction. Other tissues
were fixed in 4% paraformaldehyde (for in situ reverse transcriptase
polymerase chain reaction [RT-PCR]) or Bouin's solution (for
immunohistochemistry).
RT-PCR
RT-PCR was performed to determine whether intestinal tissue
contained mRNA for the G-CSF receptor (G-CSF-R). Total cellular RNA was
extracted using the method described by Chomczynski and Sacchi,26 and the extracted RNA was stored at In Situ RT-PCR
To determine whether the G-CSF-R mRNA signal in the RT-PCR was
the result of contaminating blood in the fetal tissues, detection of
G-CSF-R mRNA also was performed by in situ RT-PCR according to the
modified method described by Nuovo et al.29 After fixation, frozen sections were digested with proteinase K, and treated
overnight with an RNAase-free DNAase solution (Perkin-Elmer, Norwalk,
CT). The tissues then were incubated with the primers and reverse
transcriptase. The sequences of the primers were described in the
previous section, and digoxigenin dUTP was used as the reporter
molecule. The positive control (purple-red) for in situ RT-PCR
eliminated the DNAase digestive reaction. An intense signal was
generated from the target-specific amplification, DNA repair and
mispriming. This control demonstrated that the PCR reaction and
subsequent detection steps all worked successfully. The negative control (absence of purple-red staining) constituted in situ RT-PCR in
which the tissue was treated with DNAase and the reverse transcriptase step was eliminated. The absence of a signal demonstrated that amplification of genomic DNA did not occur. If no definitively positive
signals were seen on the tissues, then the results were defined as
negative. Negative and positive controls were performed on the same
glass slide along with the experimental analysis using serial sections
of tissue.
Immunohistochemistry
Immunohistochemistry was performed to determine whether the mRNA
for G-CSF-R was translated into protein and to identify the specific
cellular location of this protein and its associated signaling
proteins, Janus tyrosine kinase-1 (JAK-1), Janus tyrosine kinase-2
(JAK-2), and tyrosine kinase-2 (Tyk-2). Tissue sections were
deparaffinized, rehydrated, and processed using an enzyme-labeled biotin-streptavidin system (Ventana; NexES, Tucson, AZ). The chromagen used was diaminobenzidine tetrahydrochloride (DAB). After blocking of
nonspecific binding of immunoglobulin G, a primary antibody (G-CSF-R,
1:10; JAK-1, 1:10; JAK-2, 1:10; or Tyk-2, 1:50) was applied and
counterstaining was performed. All primary antibodies were prepared
commercially (Santa Cruz Biotechnology, Inc, Santa Cruz, CA). Each
antibody is specific for human G-CSF-R, JAK-1, JAK-2, or Tyk-2,
respectively. There is no known cross-reactivity with other molecules.
Specificity of the staining was verified by negative and positive
controls. Immunostaining was absent when rabbit immune serum was
substituted for the primary antibody or when specific blocking peptide
(Santa Cruz Biotechnology) was used in the case of G-CSF-R. Staining
was considered positive when present in tissue sections of term
placenta, a tissue with abundant G-CSF-R.28 Staining was
considered positive for JAK-1, JAK-2, and Tyk-2 when present in
preparations of purified neutrophils.30,31
Performance Characteristics of the ELISA
Linearity of the assay in human milk was observed over the
concentration range 7 to 1000 pg/mL. The correlation coefficients of 2 separate spiking studies were .998 and .990, respectively. Interassay
and intraassay precision were within ranges established by the
manufacturer. The recovery of recombinant G-CSF spiked at 5 different
levels in 3 separate samples was 71% to 114%, a range similar to that
given by the manufacturer for other matrices (75%-117%).
Patient Results
Concentrations of G-CSF were found in all samples of milk. The
concentration of G-CSF did not vary during a single collection when
fore-, mid-, and hind-milk samples were compared and was measurable in
samples (n = 88) collected longitudinally during the
month after delivery. In milk collected during the first 2 postpartum
days of women who delivered at term (n = 19; Table
1), concentrations of G-CSF were
significantly greater compared with milk from women who delivered
prematurely (P = .007; n = 19). Milk
collected during the first 2 postpartum days from women with intraamniotic infection (n = 12) had G-CSF
concentrations considerably higher than those without infection,
regardless of whether the mother delivered prematurely or at term
(P = .0001 and .03). The concentration of G-CSF in milk
obtained during the first 2 postpartum days from women who received
intrapartum recombinant G-CSF (n = 4) was significantly
greater than the concentration in milk from either women with or
without intraamniotic infection who had delivered prematurely. In milk
collected after postpartum day 2, concentrations of G-CSF were
significantly less from women delivering prematurely (32 ± 18 pg/mL; n = 48), compared with women delivering at term
(37 ± 21 pg/mL; P = .01; n = 40).
TABLE 1
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METHODS
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Abstract
Methods
Results
Discussion
References
30 weeks' gestation, received a single dose (25 µg/kg) of recombinant G-CSF (Neupogen; Amgen, Thousand Oaks, CA)
during labor as part of a clinical trial to assess the transplacental passage of G-CSF.24,25 In these patients, serial milk
samples were collected daily for 5 days after delivery. Human milk was
collected into sterile containers using a low-pressure electric pump
(Medela, McHenry, IL). The institutional review board of the University
of Florida approved all studies, and informed consent was obtained from
all study participants.
80°C until analysis. G-CSF was quantified by ELISA (Quantikine Human G-CSF Immunoassay; R & D Systems, Minneapolis, MN; lower limit of
sensitivity 7 pg/mL). The assay has no measurable cross-reactivity with
other cytokines and recognizes both natural and recombinant G-CSF.
Before the analysis of any human milk samples, we performed validation
studies of the ELISA using human milk. These included: linearity,
intraassay precision, interassay precision, reproducibility, and
percent recovery using the aqueous phase of human milk.
80°C until assayed.
level set to .05. The preliminary statistical power to assess these
variables was .99. All statistics were computed using the statistical
software package SAS Version 6.12 (SAS, Cary, NC).
80°C until analysis. For RT-PCR analysis, total RNA was reverse transcribed with Moloney murine leukemia virus reverse transcriptase (GIBCO-BRL, Gathersburg, MD) to synthesize first strand complementary DNA. Amplifications of the complementary DNA were performed using specific primer pairs, and the amplified bands visualized by ethidium bromide staining. The G-CSF-R
-chain 340-bp fragment was detected by PCR of
35 cycles at 94°C for 1 minute, 51°C for 1 minute, and 72°C for 1 minute with 5'-AAG AGC CCC CTT ACC CAC TAC ACC ATC TT-3 (forward
primer), and 5'-TGC TGT GAG CTG GGT CTG GGA CAC TT-3' (reverse primer)
which amplify a segment located between nucleotides 1863 and 2149 of
the human G-CSF-R.27 Healthy term human placenta was the
positive control.28
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RESULTS
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Abstract
Methods
Results
Discussion
References
G-CSF Concentrations* (pg/mL) in Milk Collected During the First Two
Postpartum Days From Women With and Without Intraamniotic Infection and
From Women Who Received Recombinant G-CSF
RT-PCR and In Situ RT-PCR
PCR products of the predicted size for G-CSF-R (340 bp; Fig 1) were obtained from various segments of fetal intestine (n = 20 fetuses; tissue included duodenum, jejunum, ileum, colon, and stomach) at each gestation examined. A representative section of intestine at 22 weeks' postconceptual age for G-CSF-R transcripts as determined by in situ RT-PCR, as well as controls, are shown in Fig 2A-C). The G-CSF-R mRNA was localized to the apical surface of villi within enterocytes (Fig 2A). Nonspecific staining resulted when the tissue was not subjected to DNAase treatment (Fig 2B), and absence of staining occurred when reverse transcription was not performed (Fig 2C).
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Immunohistochemistry
Representative sections of intestines from fetuses (n = 15) at 8 to 10, 16 to 18, and 22 to 24 weeks' postconceptual age demonstrated the presence of G-CSF-R (Fig 3A-C). At 8 to 10 weeks' postconceptual age, immunoreactivity for G-CSF-R was present in nuclei within the mucosal epithelium and was occasionally prominent at the base of the crypts and in fibroblast nuclei of the lamina propria and submucosa. At 16 to 18 weeks, only the smooth muscle blush was evident. By 24 weeks, reactions were distinctly cytoplasmic and located at the cell apex of the mucosal epithelium in developing enterocytes, and within the basally located nucleus. At 22 to 24 weeks, staining of protein representing JAK-1, JAK-2, and Tyk-2 occurred within the cytoplasm of enterocytes of developing villi (Fig 3D-F).
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DISCUSSION |
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Human milk contains a variety of cellular and soluble components that protect infants from infection. Indeed, feeding with human milk is among the most effective methods known for protecting preterm neonates from infection.6 In the present study, we investigated a specific cytokine in human milk, G-CSF, and the expression of its receptor, G-CSF-R, on fetal intestinal villi. Significant quantities of G-CSF were found in milk, and these remained measurable during the first 4 weeks of lactation. These findings are similar to concentrations reported by Gilmore and colleagues10 and Wallace et al.11 G-CSF was higher in milk collected during the first 2 postpartum days than in milk collected later and was significantly elevated when intraamniotic infection was present. No difference in concentration was observed in fore-, mid-, and hind-milk. G-CSF concentrations in milk collected during the first 2 postpartum days were significantly increased in mothers who received an intravenous dose of recombinant G-CSF immediately before delivery.
Although mechanisms are not known to exist in breast tissue for concentrating cytokines from the blood,32 we observed that G-CSF concentrations in milk are generally much higher than the serum G-CSF concentrations of postpartum women, as reported by Bailie et al33 With respect to other cytokines in milk, local production is common, and it is conceivable that other cellular elements, like milk macrophages, are responsible for G-CSF production, in a manner similar to that of peripheral blood monocytes.15 Macrophages are prominent in milk, and cytokine production can be altered dramatically by their presence.32 Still, other cytokines, such as macrophage colony-stimulating factor, interleukin 6 and interleukin 8, are produced by mammary gland epithelial cells.32,34 Much remains to be learned about the origins of G-CSF in human milk and how that production is regulated.
We observed G-CSF-R in fetal intestine and its anatomic location changed with development. In fetal villi at 22 to 24 weeks, the receptor was localized to the enterocyte, and the signaling proteins JAK-1, JAK-2, and Tyk-2 were present within the cytoplasm. If signaling by the G-CSF-R within the developing intestine occurs in a manner similar to that proposed in neutrophils, the presence of these proteins suggests that the G-CSF-R in the fetal intestine at 22 to 24 weeks is functional. However, testing function is clearly more complicated than measuring signaling proteins. Further, whether G-CSF in human milk specifically activates the G-CSF-R on enterocytes cannot be concluded from this study.
Recently, we observed that significant concentrations of G-CSF in human milk are measurable after in vitro simulations of digestion.35 Milk increases the hydrogen ion concentration of the stomach, and thus ingested proteins resist gastric digestion by proteolytic enzymes, which require low hydrogen ion concentrations for activation.36 In early postnatal life, the balance of factors affecting luminal proteolysis favors limited protein digestion.37,38 G-CSF may be protected from degradation by the presence of antiproteolytic agents known to be present in milk.36 Other studies are needed to determine whether the G-CSF in human milk is biologically active.
It remains to be determined what role, if any, G-CSF in human milk has on fetal enterocytes or systemically on neutrophil proliferation, differentiation, or survival. Moreover, it is not clear whether the beneficial effect of human milk on reducing infection rates is, in part, a consequence of its G-CSF content. Understanding these issues will be important in the efforts to improve the antiinfection properties of infant formulas, for those infants for whom no human milk is available.
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ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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This work was supported by Grants HL-44951, RR-00083, and HD-01180 from the National Institutes of Health.
We thank P. Connolly, RN, and T. Lipe, RN, for their assistance with the collection of human milk samples, and D. Theriaque, MS, and A. D. Hutson, PhD, for their assistance with the statistical analyses.
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FOOTNOTES |
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Received for publication Mar 23, 1999; accepted Jul 29, 1999.
Reprint requests to (D.A.C.) Division of Neonatology, Department of Pediatrics, University of Florida College of Medicine, PO Box 100296, Gainesville, FL 32610-0296. E-mail: calhoda{at}peds.ufl.edu
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ABBREVIATIONS |
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G-CSF, granulocyte colony-stimulating factor; ELISA, enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay; RT-PCR, reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction; G-CSF-R, granulocyte colony-stimulating factor receptor; JAK-1, Janus tyrosine kinase-1; JAK-2, Janus tyrosine kinase-2; Tyk-2, tyrosine kinase-2.
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REFERENCES |
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Science
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263:92-94 This article has been cited by other articles:
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G. Chirico, R. Marzollo, S. Cortinovis, C. Fonte, and A. Gasparoni Antiinfective Properties of Human Milk J. Nutr., September 1, 2008; 138(9): 1801S - 1806S. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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