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. 1994 Dec;83(4):595-600.

IgE receptors, IgE content and secretory response of mast cells in athymic rats

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IgE receptors, IgE content and secretory response of mast cells in athymic rats

X J Chen et al. Immunology. 1994 Dec.

Abstract

Athymic, nude (Lewis rnu/rnu) and normal (Lewis +/+) rats were used to study the T-cell dependence of the regulation of IgE receptors and IgE content on mast cells in vivo. We estimated the number of IgE receptors and the IgE content on peritoneal mast cells using a cytofluorometric technique. The secretory capacity of the mast cells was measured in terms of histamine release as a function of anti-IgE concentration by incubation with antibodies in vitro. Two groups of rats, aged 6 and 13 weeks, were examined. The mast cells of the rats belonging to the older age group (both normal and athymic) had a higher total protein (equivalent to dry mass or size) and mediator content (heparin, histamine and 5-hydroxytryptamine) in accordance with previous findings. Mast cells of the athymic rats of both age groups contained similar levels of IgE receptors and IgE and did not differ in these respects from those of the normal rats. Of the IgE receptors available for binding, about 80% were occupied by IgE in mast cells of normal and of athymic rats in both age groups. The anti-IgE-induced histamine release of the mast cells was, however, significantly lower in athymic rats compared to the normal controls. A change in housing from barrier-maintained to conventional conditions for 2 weeks enhanced the IgE-receptor and IgE content, as well as the releasability of histamine of the mast cells of both athymic and normal rats. The basal level of IgE occupancy of the receptors on mast cells was therefore not impaired in the athymic rats, as might be inferred from previous findings of a T-cell dependence of the IgE immune response. The results further indicate that T-lymphocyte-derived cytokines appear not to be required for either the expression of IgE receptors or for their ability to acquire IgE on mast cells, but such factors seem to enhance the release of histamine following the cross-linkage of the IgE receptor on mast cells in normal conditions.

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