Diesel exhaust particles (DEP) have been implicated in the increased incidence of allergic airway disorders. We investigated the effects of DEP on localized immunoglobulin production by performing nasal challenges with varying doses of DEP and analyzing the local immune response in nasal lavages obtained before and after. A significant rise in nasal IgE but not IgG, IgA, IgM, or albumin was observed in subjects 4 d after challenge with 0.30 mg DEP, equivalent to exposure on an average Los Angeles day. Direct evidence for DEP-enhanced local production of IgE was that challenge increased the number of IgE-secreting cells in lavage fluid from < 1 in 2,000,000 to > 1 in 100,000 but did not alter the number of IgA-secreting cells. There was a concomitant increase in epsilon mRNA production in the lavage cells. Additionally, DEP altered the relative amounts of five different epsilon mRNAs generated by alternative splicing, mRNAs that code for different IgE proteins. These results show that DEP exposure in vivo causes both quantitative and qualitative changes in local IgE production. The implication is that natural exposure to DEP may result in increased expression of respiratory allergic disease. (J. Clin.
Like asthma and atopic dermatitis, allergic rhinitis is an allergic disease, but of the three, it is the only type I allergic disease. Allergic rhinitis includes pollinosis, which is intractable and reduces quality of life (QOL) when it becomes severe. A guideline is needed to understand allergic rhinitis and to use this knowledge to develop a treatment plan. In Japan, the first guideline was prepared after a symposium held by the Japanese Society of Allergology in 1993. The current 6th edition was published in 2009, and is widely used today. To incorporate evidence based medicine (EBM) introduced from abroad, the most recent collection of evidence/literature was supplemented to the Practical Guideline for the Management of Allergic Rhinitis in Japan 2009. The revised guideline includes assessment of diagnosis/treatment and prescriptions for children and pregnant women, for broad clinical applications. An evidence-based step-by-step strategy for treatment is also described. In addition, the QOL concept and cost benefit analyses are also addressed. Along with Allergic Rhinitis and its Impact of Asthma (ARIA), this guideline is widely used for various clinical purposes, such as measures for patients with sinusitis, childhood allergic rhinitis, oral allergy syndrome, and anaphylaxis and for pregnant women.
Unfractionated spleen cells taken from tumor-bearing mice 2 weeks after tumor implantation contained tumor-primed T cells which produced cytokines including IL-2 and IFN-gamma when cultured in vitro. With progressive tumor growth this initial lymphokine-producing capacity decreased. Here, we investigated the ability of IL-12 to (i) restore suppressed IFN-gamma production, (ii) cause tumor regression and (ii) induce anti-tumor protective immunity. Addition of rIL-12 to spleen cell cultures from 4- to 10-week-old tumor-bearing mice resulted in a striking enhancement in the production of IFN-gamma compared with cultures of these cells in the absence of rIL-12 or of normal spleen cells in the presence of rIL-12. Five i.p. injections of rIL-12 into mice bearing s.c. tumors induced complete tumor regression. This was found when rIL-12 was given at early (1-2 weeks), intermediate (4-5 weeks) or even late (7 weeks) stages of tumor growth. Furthermore, IL-12-treated mice which rejected the primary tumor exhibited complete resistance to a rechallenge with the same tumor but did not reject a second syngenetic tumor. Immunohistochemical analyses following IL-12 treatment revealed that CD4+ and CD8+ T cells infiltrate the tumor. More importantly, IFN-gamma mRNA expression was observed in fresh tumor masses from tumor-bearing mice receiving IL-12 treatment. The importance of IFN-gamma was further demonstrated by the observation that the systemic administration of anti-IFN-gamma mAb prior to IL-12 treatment completely abrogated the anti-tumor effect of IL-12. Thus, these results indicate that administration of modest levels of rIL-12 to tumor-bearing mice results in tumor regression through mechanisms involving reversal of suppressed IFN-gamma production by anti-tumor T cells and the establishment of a tumor-specific protective immune response.
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