Frequency analysis of IgE-secreting B lymphocytes in persons with normal or elevated serum IgE levels.

Abstract
The immunoregulatory mechanisms that determine the high serum IgE antibody levels in disorders such as helminth parasite infections and the hyper-IgE recurrent infection syndrome (HIE) remain poorly understood. To assess whether elevated serum IgE levels result from an increased number of B lymphocytes committed to IgE production, the proportion of IgE-producing B lymphocytes was determined by a filter immunoplaque assay using PBMC from persons with a broad range of serum IgE levels that included normal persons (n = 9) and patients with loiasis (n = 12), tropical pulmonary eosinophilia (TPE) (n = 6), lymphatic filariasis (n = 28), and HIE (n = 8). PBMC from these persons were assessed for production of in vitro IgE. The geometric mean number of IgE-secreting cells in 10(5) B lymphocytes in PBMC was 0.42 (range 0-2.2) in normal persons, 5.6 (range 0.1-35.5) among patients with loiasis, 9.4 (range 0-53.2) among patients with lymphatic filariasis, 52 (range 31.5-115) among patients with TPE, and 218 (range 56-1404) among patients with HIE. When all study subjects were grouped, there were significant correlations with serum IgE levels (r2 = 0.78; p less than 0.0001) and net spontaneous in vitro IgE production (r2 = 0.8; p less than 0.0001). Estimates of the amount of IgE production per B lymphocyte were similar among normal persons, patients with filarial infections, and patients with TPE (geometric means of 134, 96, and 141 pg/ml/cell, respectively); in contrast, for HIE patients, IgE production by individual B cells was significantly lower (geometric mean 28 pg/ml/cell; p less than 0.001). These observations demonstrate that clonal expansion of IgE-producing B lymphocytes is a major mechanism underlying the elevated serum IgE levels seen in persons with hyper-IgE states.

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