Relationship between facilitated allergen presentation and the presence of allergen-specific IgE in serum of atopic patients

  • Van Der Heijden F
  • Van Neerven R
  • Kapsenberg M
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Abstract

Allergen presentation to allergen-specific T cells can be facilitated when IgE–allergen complexes are endocytosed by antigen-presenting cells (APC) after binding to the low-affinity Fc·R type II (CD23). Here we present a study on the relative capabilities of sera of atopic patients to mediate facilitated antigen presentation (FAP). To this aim FAP was studied in an in vitro model in which CD23-expressing Epstein–Barr virus (EBV)-B cells act as APC to T lymphocyte clones (TLC) that are specific for Der p 2, a major allergen of housedust mite Dermatophagoides pteronyssinus (Dp). Der p 2 is immune-complexed by preincubation in sera from atopic patients, containing allergen-specific IgE. If EBV-B cells are preincubated with these complexes before using the cells as APC, the allergen-specific TLC proliferate at 100–1000-fold lower allergen concentration than required for T cell activation after presentation of uncomplexed allergen. The relative capability of various sera to mediate FAP was correlated with total serum IgE, and especially with Der p 2-specific serum IgE. In the model used, a high FAP capacity could be demonstrated only in sera with a total serum IgE concentration above approximately 2 /μg/ml or with Der p 2-specific IgE above approximately 100 ng/ml. Maximal FAP, i.e. the ability to induce maximal proliferation of the TLC, was obtained in the presence of more than × 600 ng Der p 2-specific IgE/ml. At 100–600 ng/ml Der p 2-specific IgE the level of FAP was correlated with the concentration of allergen-specific IgE, whereas at lower concentrations FAP was low or absent. All tested sera from eczema patients, all having serum anti-Der p 2-IgE concentrations > 600 ng/ml, showed a high FAP capacity, whereas all tested sera from atopic patients without eczema, which had serum anti-Der p 2-IgE levels < 600 ng/ml, showed no or a low FAP capacity. The association of high FAP capacity with eczema may reflect a functional role of FAP in the pathogenesis of atopic dermatitis.

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APA

Van Der Heijden, F. L., Van Neerven, R. J. J., & Kapsenberg, M. L. (2008). Relationship between facilitated allergen presentation and the presence of allergen-specific IgE in serum of atopic patients. Clinical and Experimental Immunology, 99(2), 289–293. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2249.1995.tb05547.x

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