Tradeoffs in milk immunity affect infant infectious disease risk.
Katherine WanderMasako FujitaSiobhán M MattisonMargaret DurisMegan GauckTessa HoptKatherine LacyAngela FolignoRebecca UlloaConnor DodgeFrida MowoIreen KiweluBlandina T MmbagaPublished in: Evolution, medicine, and public health (2022)
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.