Dalai S K, Das D, Kar S K
Centre for Biotechnology, Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi, India.
J Clin Immunol. 1998 Mar;18(2):114-23. doi: 10.1023/a:1023294716282.
High titers of parasite antigen-specific IgG4 antibodies have been found to be circulating in the peripheral blood of chronic patients, asymptomatic microfilariae carriers, and endemic normals in bancroftian filariasis. But in contrast to this, the titers of antigen-specific IgG1, IgG2, and IgG3 isotype antibodies are much lower. Using soluble antigens of adult Setaria digitata, a cattle parasite which shows strong antigenic reactivity with filaria sera, we have identified, by immunoblot, 14- to 20-kDa antigens which are recognized only by the IgG4 isotype antibodies present in the sera of asymptomatic microfilariae carriers. These 14- to 20-kDa antigens, after fractionation by SDS-PAGE and transfer to nitrocellulose paper, when solubilized and tested in vitro, induced secretion of a higher quantity of IFN-gamma and a lower quantity of IL-4, IL-5, and IL-10 (differential Th1 and Th2 response) in the lymphocytes of endemic normals in comparison to what they induced in the lymphocytes of asymptomatic microfilariae carriers.