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The Journal of Immunology, Vol 147, Issue 9 3001-3004, Copyright © 1991 by American Association of Immunologists


ARTICLES

IL-4-dependent IgE switch in membrane IgA-positive human B cells

XH Zhang, C Werner-Favre, HY Tang, N Brouwers, JY Bonnefoy and RH Zubler
Department of Medicine, Geneva University Hospital, Switzerland.

IgE responses by human B cells, separated according to membrane Ig classes, were analyzed in a clonal assay using EL-4 thymoma cells as helper cells, T cell supernatant, and rIL-4. In cultures seeded by means of the autoclone apparatus of the FACS, IgE responses were generated frequently by either IgM (mu+/gamma-alpha-) or IgA (alpha +/mu-)-positive B cells (16 and 14% of the Ig producing wells, respectively), but rarely by IgG (gamma +/mu-)-positive B cells (1.3% of Ig producing wells). The total amounts of Ig secreted by IgM-, IgG-, or IgA-positive cells and the total proportions of responding autoclone wells (23-27%) were comparable. All IgE secretion was IL-4 dependent. When the Ig secretion patterns from alpha +/mu- vs alpha +/mu-epsilon- B cells were compared, most autoclone wells from both types of cells produced IgA only, and similar proportions of IgA producing wells (6.2 and 6.0%) also secreted IgE. In addition, IgE restricted responses occurred 6 times more frequently with alpha +/mu- than with alpha +/mu- epsilon- cells, which suggests that membrane IgA+E double-positive, IgE committed B cells occur in vivo. The isotype pattern generated by alpha +/mu-epsilon- B cells cannot be explained by a chance assortment of separate IgA and IgE precursors or by cytophilic antibody. Thus, IL-4 dependent switch to IgE occurred frequently in IgM- or IgA-positive, but rarely among total IgG-positive, B cells. This could be relevant to IgE production in mucosal tissues rich in IgA expressing B cells.


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