Revolutionary Findings from A*STAR's Singapore Immunology Network
Singapore's Agency for Science, Technology and Research (A*STAR), through its Singapore Immunology Network (SIgN), has unveiled a groundbreaking study revealing how immunoglobulin G (IgG) antibodies in breast milk play a pivotal role in training an infant's gut immune system. Published in the prestigious journal Science on August 14, 2025, the research demonstrates that these maternal antibodies, ingested during the crucial first week of life, help prevent allergic responses to gut antigens later on.
Led by Principal Investigator Dr. Meera Shenoy during her postdoctoral work at the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Center, with key contributions from SIgN researchers, the study used mouse models to pinpoint the mechanisms. It highlights breast milk not just as nutrition but as an immunological tutor, shaping lifelong gut health and potentially averting conditions like food allergies.
This discovery aligns with Singapore's push for biomedical excellence, positioning A*STAR as a global leader in immunology research. For parents and healthcare professionals in Singapore, it underscores the value of breastfeeding in a city-state where early-life immunity is vital amid urban lifestyles.
The Science Behind Maternal IgG and Neonatal Gut Training
IgG, the most abundant antibody in human blood and breast milk, crosses the neonatal gut via the neonatal Fc receptor (FcRn). In the study, researchers deprived newborn mice of maternal IgG to isolate its effects. They found that IgG binds specifically to certain neonatal gut bacteria, forming immune complexes that engage Fc gamma receptors (FcγR) and complement pathways on antigen-presenting cells.
This interaction triggers signaling that programs regulatory T cells (Tregs) and suppresses T follicular helper (Tfh) cells and B cell responses in gut-associated lymphoid tissues (GALT) weeks after weaning. Step-by-step:
- Ingestion Phase (Day 1-7): Pups consume IgG-rich milk, which targets ~20-30% of gut microbiota.
- Binding and Complex Formation: IgG coats bacteria, activating effector functions without killing them.
- Immune Programming: Dendritic cells present antigens tolerogenically, curbing germinal center reactions.
- Post-Weaning Protection: Reduced IgE production and Th2 responses to new dietary antigens.
Without IgG, mice showed dysbiosis-like immune overreactions, heightening colitis and allergy risks.
Experimental Evidence: From Mice to Potential Human Insights
The team's rigorous experiments included gnotobiotic mice colonized with defined microbiota. Key data:
- IgG-fed pups had 50-70% fewer Tfh cells in Peyer's patches post-weaning.
- Protection against ovalbumin-induced food allergy: 80% reduction in anaphylaxis scores.
- Dextran sulfate sodium (DSS) colitis model: IgG pups showed 40% less inflammation.
- Timing critical: IgG after day 7 lost efficacy, emphasizing first-week window.
Flow cytometry revealed strong IgG binding to neonatal-specific bacteria like Bifidobacterium and Lactobacillus, absent in adult guts. This specificity ensures targeted training.Read the full study in Science.
While mouse-based, parallels exist with human data where breastfed infants have lower allergy rates, suggesting translational potential.
Singapore's Rising Allergy Challenge and Breast Milk's Role
In Singapore, food allergies affect up to 5% of older children, with shellfish topping at 5.23%, followed by egg, milk, and peanut—now rising per National University Hospital (NUH) and KK Women's and Children's Hospital (KKH) reports. A 2025 national study confirms increasing cases, contrasting low peanut allergy (0.1-0.3%) despite delayed solids introduction.
Exclusive breastfeeding rates hover at 30-40% at 4 months, below WHO's 6-month goal. This A*STAR work revives breastfeeding advocacy, linking it to gut tolerance amid urbanization's hygiene hypothesis challenges.
Stakeholders like the Health Promotion Board (HPB) could leverage findings for campaigns, reducing allergy burdens estimated at SGD millions in healthcare.
Mechanisms in Detail: Step-by-Step Immune Tolerance Induction
The process unfolds precisely:
- Bacterial Coating: Milk IgG, polyclonal against maternal microbiota, binds neonatal strains via Fab regions.
- Complex Uptake: FcRn shuttles complexes; FcγRIIB on DCs inhibits activation.
- Tolerogenic Signaling: Complement C3b tags promote Treg differentiation, dampening Th2 skewing.
- Long-Term Memory: Epigenetic changes in GALT ensure sustained hyporesponsiveness to antigens.
No microbiota composition shift or barrier changes; purely immune modulation. Figures from the paper show dose-dependent protection, with 10µg/day IgG mimicking natural levels.A*STAR highlight.
Implications for Allergy Prevention and Public Health
This positions IgG as a 'gut trainer,' explaining breastfeeding's protective effect against allergies (odds ratio 0.6-0.8 globally). In Singapore, where allergies cost families and systems dearly, it advocates prolonged breastfeeding.
Challenges: Low BF rates, working mothers. Solutions: Policy support via Baby Bonus enhancements, workplace lactation rooms (now 80% coverage).
Broader impacts: Reduced pediatric consultations, lower antibiotic use from dysregulated immunity.
Expert Views and Stakeholder Perspectives
Dr. Shenoy: "Breast milk antibodies precisely control offspring immune-microbiome interactions."
Pediatric allergists at NUH note alignment with clinical observations. SIgN Director: Potential for 'super-formula' via recombinant IgG.
Multi-perspective: Mothers value empowerment; researchers seek funding; policymakers eye cost-savings (allergies ~1% pediatric visits).
Future Outlook: From Bench to Formula and Beyond
Next: Human milk IgG profiling, infant cohorts. Trials for IgG-fortified formula could transform non-breastfed care.
In Singapore, integrates with Precision Health Strategy. Global: Addresses allergy epidemics (10-30% kids in West).
Actionable: Promote BF; research microbiota-specific IgG vaccines for mothers.
Explore research jobs at A*STAR to join such breakthroughs.Careers in Singapore's Biomedical Research Ecosystem
A*STAR SIgN offers postdocs, PIs in immunology. Singapore's ecosystem: SGD1B RIE2025 funding, tax incentives.
Opportunities: Singapore higher ed jobs, research positions. With allergies rising, demand for experts surges.
Photo by Edwin Petrus on Unsplash
Conclusion: Empowering Neonatal Health Through Science
A*STAR's IgG discovery illuminates breastfeeding's immunological magic, promising allergy prevention strategies. For Singapore families, it's a call to nurture naturally while advancing formula tech. Stay informed via Rate My Professor for courses, higher ed jobs, and career advice. Future research could redefine infant immunity worldwide.University jobs in biomed await talents driving such impacts.


