The transition from specific to nonspecific desensitization in human basophils.

  • MacGlashan D
  • Lichtenstein L
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Abstract

Human basophils can be desensitized to IgE-mediated stimuli either specifically (to the desensitizing antigen only) or nonspecifically (to all antigens). It has been suggested that the specificity of desensitization depends on the number of membrane-bound, antigen-specific IgE antibody molecules per basophil. We have varied the number of IgE antibody molecules/basophil by passive sensitization of mixed leukocyte preparations with increasing concentrations of purified IgE anti-penicillin (BPO) antibody. The cells were then desensitized with penicillin-human serum albumin (BPO-HSA). Desensitization was specific (lack of response to BPO-HSA only) with 1000 specific antibody molecules/basophil, and increasingly nonspecific (greater than 70% desensitization to rechallenge with anti-IgE and ragweed antigen E as well as lack of response to BPO-HSA) as the number of antibody molecules was increased to 14,000. This formally established that the number of specific IgE antibody molecules/basophil determines the mode of desensitization.

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MacGlashan, D. W., & Lichtenstein, L. M. (1981). The transition from specific to nonspecific desensitization in human basophils. The Journal of Immunology, 127(6), 2410–2414. https://doi.org/10.4049/jimmunol.127.6.2410

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