Background And Objectives: The human immune system has evolved to balance protection against infection with control of immune-mediated damage and tolerance of commensal microbes. Such tradeoffs between protection and harm almost certainly extend to the immune system of milk.

Methodology: Among breastfeeding mother-infant dyads in Kilimanjaro, Tanzania, we characterized proinflammatory milk immune responses to (an infectious agent) and (a benign target) as the increase in interleukin-6 after 24 h of incubation with each bacterium. We characterized incident infectious diseases among infants through passive monitoring. We used Cox proportional hazards models to describe associations between milk immune activity and infant infectious disease.

Results: Among infants, risk for respiratory infections declined with increasing milk proinflammatory response to (hazard ratio [HR]: 0.68; 95% confidence interval [CI]: 0.54, 0.86; : 0.001), while risk for gastrointestinal infections increased with increasing milk proinflammatory response to (HR: 1.44; 95% CI: 1.05, 1.99; : 0.022). Milk proinflammatory responses to and were positively correlated (Spearman's rho: 0.60; : 0.000).

Conclusions And Implications: These findings demonstrate a tradeoff in milk immune activity: the benefits of appropriate proinflammatory activity come at the hazard of misdirected proinflammatory activity. This tradeoff is likely to affect infant health in complex ways, depending on prevailing infectious disease conditions. How mother-infant dyads optimize proinflammatory milk immune activity should be a central question in future ecological-evolutionary studies of the immune system of milk.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9233416PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/emph/eoac020DOI Listing

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