Publication | Open Access
Production of a histamine-releasing lymphokine by antigen- or mitogen-stimulated human peripheral T cells.
101
Citations
16
References
1981
Year
Immune RegulationImmunologyImmunologic MechanismDermatologyImmunotherapyInflammationPbl PreparationsImmunopathologyHistamine-releasing LymphokineCell SignalingAllergyAutoimmune DiseaseAutoimmunityT Cell ImmunityImmune FunctionPbl DonorCell BiologyHra ProductionCellular Immune ResponseMedicine
Human peripheral blood leucocytes (PBL), cultured in the presence of mitogen or antigen, yielded supernatants which contained a factor with histamine-releasing activity (HRA). This factor, analogous to the putative lymphokine HRA described by Thueson et al. (1979a), was shown to promote the rapid release of histamine from PBL preparations containing basophils. HRA production by PBL in response to co-culture with the skin test antigens Candida and SK-SD was shown to reflect the in vivo immune status of the PBL donor. Experiments with isolated cell populations from PBL implicated T cells as the prime source of HRA, production of the factor being macrophage-dependent. HRA activity failed to synergize anti-IgE-mediated histamine release, and was not species-restricted.
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