IgE synthesis by chronic lymphocytic leukemia cells

The present results indicate that B cells isolated from chronic lymphocytic leukemia (B-CLL) from 11 of 14 patients are capable of specifically producing IgE upon costimulation with IL-4 and hydrocortisone (HC). IgE is detected by intracytoplasmic fluorescence staining and by RIA. Clinical, hematolo...

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Bibliographic Details
Format: Online
Language:English
Published: The Rockefeller University Press 1989
Online Access:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2189500/
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Summary:The present results indicate that B cells isolated from chronic lymphocytic leukemia (B-CLL) from 11 of 14 patients are capable of specifically producing IgE upon costimulation with IL-4 and hydrocortisone (HC). IgE is detected by intracytoplasmic fluorescence staining and by RIA. Clinical, hematological, and immunological parameters (including Rai stage, WBC, Lc, sIg kappa/lambda, CD5, and CD23 expression) cannot distinguish the IgE responder from the nonresponder patients. IL-4 alone is a potent inducer of human IgE synthesis by normal PBMC and we show here that its effect is strikingly enhanced by HC. The IgE produced by B-CLLs are monoclonal since they display the same L chain type as the freshly isolated CD5+ B-CLLs. We, therefore, conclude that the combination of IL-4 and HC can abrogate the maturation arrest of CD5+ B-CLLs by inducing their differentiation into IgE-producing cells. The present data provide a unique model to study the isotype switching to IgE and the regulation of human IgE synthesis by monoclonal human B cells.