Ramaswamy K, Hakimi J, Bell R G
J.A. Baker Institute for Animal Health, College of Veterinary Medicine, Cornell University, Ithaca, New York 14853.
J Exp Med. 1994 Nov 1;180(5):1793-803. doi: 10.1084/jem.180.5.1793.
Immunoglobulin (Ig) E is the principal Ig involved in immediate hypersensitivities and chronic allergic diseases such as asthma. Helminths are the most potent infectious agents known for their capacity to stimulate IgE production during the course of infection. In rats, the nematode Trichinella spiralis typically elicits a strong parasite-specific IgE response during infection, and this IgE antibody has been shown to be protective against the parasite in passive transfer experiments. The study reported here analyzed the fate of 125I-labeled myeloma IgE (1R162) in normal and T. spiralis-infected rats after intravenous injection. T. spiralis infection induced a capacity for specific binding to the gut wall of 125I-IgE rather than 125I-IgG1, as well as the transport of IgE, but not IgG1, into the gut lumen. Peak intestinal uptake and transport of 125I-IgE occurred during the first and second weeks after injection but was not elevated in the fourth week, that is, after intestinal adult worms had been expelled. Neither 125I-IgE uptake in the gut wall nor transport to the lumen could be ascribed to tissue damage or vascular leakage. Luminal transport occurred in the small intestine and not the liver, which only transports low molecular weight degraded 125I-IgE. Calculations based on the amount of intact IgE in the lumen suggest that, in a 24-h period, up to 20% of injected 125I-IgE can be transported to the gut lumen during the peak transport period, between 6 and 14 d after infection. The intestinal IgE binding and transport response can be adoptively transferred with T. spiralis immune CD4+ OX22- (CD45RC-) lymphocytes, which are protective, but not the nonprotective sister population CD4+ OX22+ (CD45RC+) of lymphocytes isolated simultaneously from thoracic duct lymph of infected rats. The intravenous infusion of recombinant rat interleukin 4 also elicited significant intestinal uptake of 125I-IgE. We also present evidence for the presence of CD23 on rat intraepithelial lymphocytes. These data provide evidence for a novel, inducible, intestine-specific IgE uptake and transport mechanism.
免疫球蛋白(Ig)E是参与速发型超敏反应和慢性过敏性疾病(如哮喘)的主要免疫球蛋白。蠕虫是已知的最有效的感染因子,因其在感染过程中刺激IgE产生的能力而闻名。在大鼠中,旋毛虫线虫在感染期间通常会引发强烈的寄生虫特异性IgE反应,并且在被动转移实验中已证明这种IgE抗体对寄生虫具有保护作用。本文报道的研究分析了静脉注射后,正常大鼠和感染旋毛虫的大鼠体内125I标记的骨髓瘤IgE(1R162)的命运。旋毛虫感染诱导了125I-IgE而非125I-IgG1与肠壁特异性结合的能力,以及IgE而非IgG1向肠腔的转运。125I-IgE的肠道摄取和转运高峰出现在注射后的第一周和第二周,但在第四周(即肠道成虫被排出后)并未升高。肠壁对125I-IgE的摄取和向肠腔的转运都不能归因于组织损伤或血管渗漏。肠腔转运发生在小肠而非肝脏,肝脏仅转运低分子量降解的125I-IgE。根据肠腔中完整IgE的量进行的计算表明,在感染后6至14天的转运高峰期,在24小时内,高达20%的注射125I-IgE可被转运至肠腔。肠道IgE结合和转运反应可通过旋毛虫免疫的CD4+ OX22-(CD45RC-)淋巴细胞进行过继转移,这些淋巴细胞具有保护作用,但从感染大鼠胸导管淋巴中同时分离出的非保护性淋巴细胞姊妹群体CD4+ OX22+(CD45RC+)则不具有此作用。重组大鼠白细胞介素4的静脉输注也引发了125I-IgE显著的肠道摄取。我们还提供了大鼠上皮内淋巴细胞上存在CD23的证据。这些数据为一种新的、可诱导的、肠道特异性IgE摄取和转运机制提供了证据。