Background: Enhanced production of TH-2 cytokines plays a key role in increased IgE production in allergic diseases. Reports about the cytokine profile secreted by peripheral blood mononuclear cells of patients with hyper-IgE syndrome, however, are controversial, suggesting alternative causes for increased IgE production in this syndrome.
Objective: We wished to determine whether mononuclear cells from patients with hyper-IgE syndrome have a pattern of interleukin-4 (IL-4) and interferon-gamma (IFN-gamma) production characteristic of a predominance of TH-2 cells and whether the cytokine production pattern is constant over time.
Methods: IL-4 and IFN-gamma secretion by peripheral blood mononuclear cells stimulated with phytohemagglutinin and D. pteronyssinus was measured by ELISA in culture supernatants. Patients with the hyper-IgE syndrome were evaluated 3 times at 4-week intervals and compared with asthmatic patients and normal subjects.
Results: In PHA-stimulated cultures, patients with hyper-IgE syndrome had an IL-4 and IFN-gamma secretion similar to that of controls, while asthmatic patients had increased IL-4 and decreased IFN-gamma production. Cultures stimulated with D. pteronyssinus showed a variable pattern of secretion for both cytokines.
Conclusions: In allergic diseases, increased serum IgE level is the result of a TH-2 pattern of cytokine production, with high IL-4 and decreased IFN-gamma protein secretion. The increased serum IgE concentration typical of the hyper-IgE syndrome is likely the result of a different immunoregulatory process.