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How a Mother’s Immunity Transfers to Her Baby

A new study examines how mothers transfer antibodies to their infants, via the placenta, to boost their newborns' immunity to certain diseases.  

Innovation Story

How a Mother’s Immunity Transfers to Her Baby

A study led by Ragon Institute researchers identifies how a pregnant woman’s vaccine-induced immunity is transferred to her child.

by
Sue McGreevey
July 27, 2019

One of the most successful interventions in reducing infectious disease worldwide, vaccination still has limited effectiveness in protecting one group of patients – newborn infants. Now a study based at the Ragon Institute of MGH, MIT and Harvard has determined how a pregnant woman’s vaccine-induced immunity is transferred to her child, which has implications for the development of more effective maternal vaccines. The report will be published in the June 27, 2019 issue of Cell and received early online release.

The study’s results have implications for the development of more effective maternal vaccines.

“Newborns arrive into the world on the first day of life with brand-new immune systems that, like the children themselves, need to learn to cope with both helpful and harmful microbes in their environment,” says Galit Alter, PhD, of the Ragon Institute and the Massachusetts General Hospital Department of Medicine, co-senior author of the Cell paper.

“To help the newborn immune system learn to discriminate between friend and foe, mothers transfer antibodies to their infants via the placenta,” she adds. “The rules by which the placenta performs this absolutely essential function have been unknown but, if decoded, could hold the key to generating more powerful vaccines to protect these most precious patients.”

Protection From Some Diseases

While maternal antibodies against some diseases such as measles can be transferred from mother to infant, providing some protection until the child is old enough for individual vaccination, antibodies to other serious diseases like polio are less efficiently transferred.

Galit Alter, PhD

To investigate the mechanisms by which antibodies are transferred from mother to child, Dr. Alter and her team – including co-senior author Laura Riley, MD, formerly with the Mass General Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology and now the chair of Obstetrics and Gynecology at Weill Cornell Medicine and New York-Presbyterian/Weill Cornell Medical Center – used a novel tool called system serology to compare the quantity and quality of antibodies against pertussis in blood samples from mothers and from the umbilical cords that carry blood, nutrients and immune factors from the placenta to the infant.

Their investigation revealed that the placenta preferentially sifts out and delivers to the infant antibodies that activate natural killer (NK) cells, key elements of the innate immune system. While several important immune cells are too immature in newborns to provide effective protection, NK cells are among the most abundant and functional immune cells during the first days of life. The team found a similar preference for placental transfer of NK-activating antibodies against influenza and respiratory syncytial virus, a common disease of childhood, and also identified antibody features that appear to regulate placental selection, features that could possibly be built into next-generation vaccines with improved mother-to-child antibody transfer.

Read more about the Ragon Institute:
Ragon Institute: Harnessing the Power of Human Immunity
Ragon Institute Study Helps Advance Work on HIV Vaccine
Mass General Receives $200 Million for Ragon Institute

Immunity and Maternal Vaccines

Dr. Riley, co-senior author, says, “We will now have the opportunity to create better maternal vaccines and deliver them at the ideal time during pregnancy to maximally protect newborns when they are most vulnerable.” Dr. Riley has received travel support from Sabin Vaccine Institute, a leading advocate of making vaccinations more accessible around the world. She and Dr. Alter will be actively investigating additional aspects of maternal:infant immunity to pave the way for developing improved maternal vaccines.

The Ragon Institute of MGH, MIT and Harvard was established in 2009 with a gift from the Phillip T. and Susan M. Ragon Foundation, creating a collaborative scientific mission among these institutions to harness the immune system to combat and cure human diseases. A primary focus of the institute has been to contribute to the development of an effective AIDS vaccine. The Ragon Institute draws scientists and engineers from diverse backgrounds and areas of expertise across the Harvard and MIT communities and throughout the world to apply the full arsenal of scientific knowledge to understanding mechanisms of immune control and immune failure and to benefit patients.

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