This project proposes to evaluate the anti-inflammation effects of human milk feeding through free approaches: 1) Examination of human milk feeding effects and feeding of purified mil anti-inflammatory components on inflammation using animal models of inflammation; 2) in vitro studies of rat intestinal cell (target cell) and neutrophil (mediator cell) cellular responses to injury, and modulation of these responses by milk and milk anti-inflammatory components; 3) examination of the relationships between human milk content of anti-inflammatory components, urinary excretion of anti-inflammatory components by breast-fed infants and the degree of inflammation associated with illnesses in breast-fed infants. Each approach will emphasize the roles of the interleukin-1 receptor antagonist (IL-1RA) and soluble forms of the p55 and p75 TNFalpha receptors (sTNF RI and sTNF RII, respectively) in altering inflammatory responses following bowel injury (animal studies), and in the relationships between amounts fed, amounts excreted by the infant, and occurrence of illness. By defining these roles and relationships, we will establish a basis for progression to future studies examining infant feeding with formulas supplemented with anti-inflammatory components.

Project Start
2001-09-01
Project End
2002-03-31
Budget Start
1998-10-01
Budget End
1999-09-30
Support Year
24
Fiscal Year
2001
Total Cost
$172,411
Indirect Cost
Name
Eastern Virginia Medical School
Department
Type
DUNS #
City
Norfolk
State
VA
Country
United States
Zip Code
23501
Reed, Benjamin D; Schibler, Kurt R; Deshmukh, Hitesh et al. (2018) The Impact of Maternal Antibiotics on Neonatal Disease. J Pediatr 197:97-103.e3
Young, Bridget E; Patinkin, Zachary W; Pyle, Laura et al. (2017) Markers of Oxidative Stress in Human Milk do not Differ by Maternal BMI But are Related to Infant Growth Trajectories. Matern Child Health J 21:1367-1376
Dingess, Kelly A; Valentine, Christina J; Ollberding, Nicholas J et al. (2017) Branched-chain fatty acid composition of human milk and the impact of maternal diet: the Global Exploration of Human Milk (GEHM) Study. Am J Clin Nutr 105:177-184
He, YingYing; Lawlor, Nathan T; Newburg, David S (2016) Human Milk Components Modulate Toll-Like Receptor-Mediated Inflammation. Adv Nutr 7:102-11
Vanchiere, John A; Carillo, Berenice; Morrow, Ardythe L et al. (2016) Fecal Polyomavirus Excretion in Infancy. J Pediatric Infect Dis Soc 5:210-3
Ward, Doyle V; Scholz, Matthias; Zolfo, Moreno et al. (2016) Metagenomic Sequencing with Strain-Level Resolution Implicates Uropathogenic E. coli in Necrotizing Enterocolitis and Mortality in Preterm Infants. Cell Rep 14:2912-24
Newburg, David S; Ko, Jae Sung; Leone, Serena et al. (2016) Human Milk Oligosaccharides and Synthetic Galactosyloligosaccharides Contain 3'-, 4-, and 6'-Galactosyllactose and Attenuate Inflammation in Human T84, NCM-460, and H4 Cells and Intestinal Tissue Ex Vivo. J Nutr 146:358-67
He, YingYing; Liu, ShuBai; Kling, David E et al. (2016) The human milk oligosaccharide 2'-fucosyllactose modulates CD14 expression in human enterocytes, thereby attenuating LPS-induced inflammation. Gut 65:33-46
Currier, Rebecca L; Payne, Daniel C; Staat, Mary A et al. (2015) Innate Susceptibility to Norovirus Infections Influenced by FUT2 Genotype in a United States Pediatric Population. Clin Infect Dis 60:1631-8
Newburg, David S; Morelli, Lorenzo (2015) Human milk and infant intestinal mucosal glycans guide succession of the neonatal intestinal microbiota. Pediatr Res 77:115-20

Showing the most recent 10 out of 292 publications