Am. J. Respir. Crit. Care Med., Vol 154, No. 2, Aug 1996, 318-323.
Reactivity to IgE-dependent histamine-releasing activity in asthma or rhinitis
SG Pasmans, M Aalbers, MJ van der Veen, EF Knol, JS van der Zee, HM Jansen and RC Aalberse
Department of Allergy and Blood Cell Chemistry, Central Laboratory of the Netherlands Red Cross Blood Transfusion Service, Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
We investigated the relation between IgE reactive with histamine- releasing
factor (HRF) and clinical status in patients with asthma or rhinitis. Sera
were used to passively sensitize purified, lactic-acid treated basophils.
IgE-independent HRF due to chemokines was removed from mononuclear cell
supernatants with heparin-Sepharose. IgE- dependent HRF was determined by
measuring the increase in histamine release between 1 min and 60 min, which
was designated delta HRF. HRF- reactive IgE was demonstrable in nine of 18
patients with allergic asthma, three of 19 patients with nonallergic
asthma, five of 17 patients with allergic rhinitis, and none of 19 control
patients. The presence of HRF-reactive IgE was associated with: (1) IgE to
inhalant allergens; 40% of radioallergosorbent test (RAST)-positive
individuals versus 8% of RAST-negative individuals were positive (OR = 7.8,
p < 0.005); (2) bronchial sensitivity to histamine in all asthmatic
patients (geometric mean PC20: 1.50 versus 0.51 mg/ml; p < 0.005); and
(3) bronchial sensitivity to histamine in allergic asthmatic patients
(geometric mean PC20: 1.27 versus 0.37 mg/ml, p < 0.02). These findings
support the hypothesis that IgE-dependent HRF might contribute to the
chronic allergic reaction.