Expression of Surface Markers on the Blood Cells during the Delayed Asthmatic Response to Allergen Challenge

Patients with bronchial asthma develop various types of asthmatic response to bronchial challenge with allergen, such as immediate/early asthmatic response (IAR), late asthmatic response (LAR) or delayed asthmatic response (DYAR), because of different immunologic mechanisms. The DYAR, occurring betw...

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Main Author: Zdenek Pelikan M.D. Ph.D.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2014-06-01
Series:Allergy & Rhinology
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.2500/ar.2014.5.0087
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spelling doaj-bd749bd9cede4501bd18cfb842974ca22020-11-25T03:24:48ZengSAGE PublishingAllergy & Rhinology2152-65672014-06-01510.2500/ar.2014.5.0087Expression of Surface Markers on the Blood Cells during the Delayed Asthmatic Response to Allergen ChallengeZdenek Pelikan M.D. Ph.D.0Allergy Research Foundation, Breda, The NetherlandsPatients with bronchial asthma develop various types of asthmatic response to bronchial challenge with allergen, such as immediate/early asthmatic response (IAR), late asthmatic response (LAR) or delayed asthmatic response (DYAR), because of different immunologic mechanisms. The DYAR, occurring between 24 and 56 hours after the bronchial allergen challenge (p < 0.01), differs from IAR and LAR in clinical as well as immunologic features. This study investigates the expression of CD molecules (markers) on the surface of particular cell populations in the peripheral blood and their changes during the DYAR. In 17 patients developing the DYAR (p < 0.01), the bronchial challenge with allergen was repeated 2–6 weeks later. The repeated DYAR (p < 0.001) was combined with recording of CD molecule expression on various types of blood cells by means of flow cytometry up to 72 hours after the challenge. The results were expressed in percent of the mean relative fluorescence intensity. The DYAR was accompanied by (a) increased expression of CD11b, CD11b/18, CD16, CD32, CD35, CD62E, CD62L, CD64, and CD66b on neutrophils; CD203C on basophils; CD25and CD62L on eosinophils; CD14, CD16, CD64, and CD86 on monocytes; CD3, CD4, CD8, CD11a, CD18, and CD69 on lymphocytes; CD16, CD56, CD57, and CD94 on natural killer (NK) cells; and CD31, CD41, CD61, CD62P, and CD63 on thrombocytes and (b) decreased expression of CD18 and CD62L on eosinophils, CD15 on neutrophils, and CD40 on lymphocytes. These results suggest involvement of cell-mediated hypersensitivity mechanism, on participation of Th 1- lymphocytes, neutrophils, monocytes, NK cells, and thrombocytes in the DYAR.https://doi.org/10.2500/ar.2014.5.0087
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Zdenek Pelikan M.D. Ph.D.
spellingShingle Zdenek Pelikan M.D. Ph.D.
Expression of Surface Markers on the Blood Cells during the Delayed Asthmatic Response to Allergen Challenge
Allergy & Rhinology
author_facet Zdenek Pelikan M.D. Ph.D.
author_sort Zdenek Pelikan M.D. Ph.D.
title Expression of Surface Markers on the Blood Cells during the Delayed Asthmatic Response to Allergen Challenge
title_short Expression of Surface Markers on the Blood Cells during the Delayed Asthmatic Response to Allergen Challenge
title_full Expression of Surface Markers on the Blood Cells during the Delayed Asthmatic Response to Allergen Challenge
title_fullStr Expression of Surface Markers on the Blood Cells during the Delayed Asthmatic Response to Allergen Challenge
title_full_unstemmed Expression of Surface Markers on the Blood Cells during the Delayed Asthmatic Response to Allergen Challenge
title_sort expression of surface markers on the blood cells during the delayed asthmatic response to allergen challenge
publisher SAGE Publishing
series Allergy & Rhinology
issn 2152-6567
publishDate 2014-06-01
description Patients with bronchial asthma develop various types of asthmatic response to bronchial challenge with allergen, such as immediate/early asthmatic response (IAR), late asthmatic response (LAR) or delayed asthmatic response (DYAR), because of different immunologic mechanisms. The DYAR, occurring between 24 and 56 hours after the bronchial allergen challenge (p < 0.01), differs from IAR and LAR in clinical as well as immunologic features. This study investigates the expression of CD molecules (markers) on the surface of particular cell populations in the peripheral blood and their changes during the DYAR. In 17 patients developing the DYAR (p < 0.01), the bronchial challenge with allergen was repeated 2–6 weeks later. The repeated DYAR (p < 0.001) was combined with recording of CD molecule expression on various types of blood cells by means of flow cytometry up to 72 hours after the challenge. The results were expressed in percent of the mean relative fluorescence intensity. The DYAR was accompanied by (a) increased expression of CD11b, CD11b/18, CD16, CD32, CD35, CD62E, CD62L, CD64, and CD66b on neutrophils; CD203C on basophils; CD25and CD62L on eosinophils; CD14, CD16, CD64, and CD86 on monocytes; CD3, CD4, CD8, CD11a, CD18, and CD69 on lymphocytes; CD16, CD56, CD57, and CD94 on natural killer (NK) cells; and CD31, CD41, CD61, CD62P, and CD63 on thrombocytes and (b) decreased expression of CD18 and CD62L on eosinophils, CD15 on neutrophils, and CD40 on lymphocytes. These results suggest involvement of cell-mediated hypersensitivity mechanism, on participation of Th 1- lymphocytes, neutrophils, monocytes, NK cells, and thrombocytes in the DYAR.
url https://doi.org/10.2500/ar.2014.5.0087
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