Pathogens (Jun 2021)

Epitope-Specific Response of Human Milk Immunoglobulins in COVID-19 Recovered Women

  • Tatyana V. Bobik,
  • Nikita N. Kostin,
  • George A. Skryabin,
  • Polina N. Tsabai,
  • Maria A. Simonova,
  • Vera D. Knorre,
  • Yuliana A. Mokrushina,
  • Ivan V. Smirnov,
  • Julia A. Kosolapova,
  • Valentina V. Vtorushina,
  • Evgeniya V. Inviyaeva,
  • Evgeniya Polushkina,
  • Ulyana L. Petrova,
  • Anna V. Levadnaya,
  • Lyubov V. Krechetova,
  • Roman G. Shmakov,
  • Gennadiy T. Sukhikh,
  • Alexander G. Gabibov

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/pathogens10060705
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 6
p. 705

Abstract

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The breastfeeding of infants by mothers who are infected with SARS-CoV-2 has become a dramatic healthcare problem. The WHO recommends that infected women should not abandon breastfeeding; however, there is still the risk of contact transmission. Convalescent donor milk may provide a defense against the aforementioned issue and can eliminate the consequences of artificial feeding. Therefore, it is vital to characterize the epitope-specific immunological landscape of human milk from women who recovered from COVID-19. We carried out a comprehensive ELISA-based analysis of blood serum and human milk from maternity patients who had recovered from COVID-19 at different trimesters of pregnancy. It was found that patients predominantly contained SARS-CoV-2 N-protein-specific immunoglobulins and had manifested the antibodies for all the antigens tested in a protein-specific and time-dependent manner. Women who recovered from COVID-19 at trimester I–II showed a noticeable decrease in the number of milk samples with sIgA specific to the N-protein, linear NTD, and RBD-SD1 epitopes, and showed an increase in samples with RBD conformation-dependent sIgA. S-antigens were found to solely induce a sIgA1 response, whereas N-protein sIgA1 and sIgA2 subclasses were involved in 100% and 33% of cases. Overall, the antibody immunological landscape of convalescent donor milk suggests that it may be a potential defense agent against COVID-19 for infants, conferring them with a passive immunity.

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