Breast milk is a complex fluid, rich in nutrients and non-nutritional bioactive components, including antimicrobial factors, immunoglobulins, cytokines, and anti-inflammatory substances. Although IgE is implicated in viral immunity, its role in breast milk in parvovirus B19 immunity has not been studied. Total immunoglobulin levels of IgE, IgG, and IgE anti-parvovirus B19 antibodies were determined by ELISA and Western blot analysis in breast milk and in sera from a mother and her nursing infant (female, 10 mo). For specific IgE protein determination, breast milk was fractionated by chromatography on G-100 Sephadex; 3 peaks were collected and separated by SDS PAGE. The levels of total IgE in breast milk and its fractions were low (<2.4 ng/ml), and those of maternal and infant serum were negligible (18 and 4.3 IU/ml, respectively). Nevertheless, the breast milk and maternal and infant sera contained IgE anti-parvovirus B19 antibodies, even though the infant was never infected with parvovirus B19. Total serum levels of maternal IgG were within the normal range and those of infant IgG were low (473 mg/dl); total IgG in breast milk was not determined. Maternal serum contained some detectable IgG anti-parvovirus antibodies that were not present in infant serum or breast milk. Total maternal and infant serum levels of IgM and IgA were within the normal ranges. The presence of IgE anti-parvovirus B19 antibodies in breast milk suggests that IgE anti-viral antibodies are transmitted in breast milk and may provide protective responses in nursing children.

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