Influence of ageing on antibody formation in vivo after immunisation with the primary T-cell dependent antigen Helix pomatia haemocyanin
- PMID: 1340513
- DOI: 10.1016/0047-6374(92)90070-t
Influence of ageing on antibody formation in vivo after immunisation with the primary T-cell dependent antigen Helix pomatia haemocyanin
Abstract
The in vivo antibody response to the primary T-cell dependent antigen Helix pomatia Haemocyanin (HPH) was studied, in order to detect the possible presence of a humoral immune deficiency in ageing. The IgG subclass distribution of the specific antibodies was also determined. In order to define a dose of HPH which could be used to discriminate between the responsiveness of healthy and immunocompromised individuals, we first established a dose-response curve for this antigen in 60 healthy young volunteers. Their responses were compared with the responses of a group of patients suffering from end stage renal failure. The patients who were treated with haemodialysis showed a significantly lower IgM, IgG and IgA anti-HPH antibody response after immunisation with a dose of 30 micrograms HPH, which could be restored by increasing the antigen dose. Patients treated with continuous ambulant peritoneal dialysis and a group of elderly persons, selected according to the Senieur protocol, showed no impairment of antibody formation after immunisation with 30 micrograms HPH, but in the non-Senieur elderly the anti-HPH antibody response was significantly lower. Furthermore, Senieur and non-Senieur elderly persons showed a diminished IgG2 anti-HPH antibody formation, whereas in the elderly non-Senieur individuals and in the patients with renal insufficiency, IgG1 and IgG3 anti-HPH antibodies were also diminished. This study clearly shows that the so-called age-associated immune deficiency can be the result of disease and is not necessarily due to the ageing process itself.
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