Postnatal Development of Binding of Streptococci and Lipoteichoic Acid by Oral Mucosal Cells of Humans

Abstract
The colonization of mucosal cells in the oral cavity of newborn infants was studied at various intervals after birth in an attempt to define the nature of the epithelial binding sites for group A streptococci and their lipoteichoic acid (LTA). Stained smears of buccal mucosal cells showed that the average number of naturally acquired bacteria/cell was zero to one in infants less than one day old, one to four in infants one day old, and 11–19 in infants two days old. Samples of the same mucosal cells were incubated with group A streptococci, and the average number of streptococci bound per cell was 10–31 in infants less than one day old, 33–62 in one-day-old infants, and 75–100 in two-day-old infants. Experiments that were repeated with group B streptococci type III produced similar results. LT A, the substance that mediates the binding of streptococci to epithelial cells, was similarly bound by fewer buccal mucosal cells obtained within 6 hr of birth than cells obtained during the next 48 hr. Streptococcal and LT A binding reached adult levels between 48 and 72 hr after birth. No difference was shown in the streptococcal binding capacity of oral epithelial cells obtained from mothers at term and cells obtained from other normal adults. Preincubation of adult buccal cells with amniotic fluid did not decrease streptococcal binding. These studies demonstrated a scant capacity of the oral mucosal cells of neonates to bind LT A and streptococci and suggest that LTAbinding sites are developed or unmasked during the first few days after birth.