Literature DB >> 24280670

Allergen immunotherapy and tolerance.

Tomokazu Matsuoka1, Mohamed H Shamji, Stephen R Durham.   

Abstract

Successful allergen-specific immunotherapy (AIT) is associated with a marked decrease in symptoms on allergen exposure, a reduced requirement for 'rescue' anti-allergic drugs and improvement in patients' quality of life. These benefits persist for at least several years following discontinuation of immunotherapy - the hallmark of clinical and immunological tolerance. AIT has been shown to modulate both innate and adaptive immunological responses. Early suppression of innate effector cells of allergic inflammation (mast cells, basophils), regulation of pro-allergic T helper 2 type (Th 2) responses and IgE+ B cell responses have been shown to occur both in the tissue and in the peripheral blood during AIT. The allergen-tolerant state is associated with local and systemic induction of distinct populations of allergen-specific T regulatory cells including IL-10+ Tregs (Tr1 cells), TGF-β+ Tregs and FoxP3+ memory T regs. B cells are switched in favour of producing IgG (particularly IgG4) antibodies and associated blocking activity for IgE-dependent events, including basophil activation and IgE-facilitated allergen binding to B cells. An induction of IL-10+ B regulatory cells and alterations in dendritic cell subsets have also recently been described. These events are followed by the induction of T regulatory cells, suppression of allergen-specific T cell proliferation and immune deviation from Th2 in favour of Th1 responses. Alternative mechanisms of tolerance include apoptosis/deletion of antigen-specific memory Th2 cells and/or a failure of co-stimulation leading to T cell anergy.

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Year:  2013        PMID: 24280670     DOI: 10.2332/allergolint.13-RAI-0650

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Allergol Int        ISSN: 1323-8930            Impact factor:   5.836


  21 in total

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2.  Synchronous immune alterations mirror clinical response during allergen immunotherapy.

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3.  International Consensus Statement on Allergy and Rhinology: Allergic Rhinitis.

Authors:  Sarah K Wise; Sandra Y Lin; Elina Toskala; Richard R Orlandi; Cezmi A Akdis; Jeremiah A Alt; Antoine Azar; Fuad M Baroody; Claus Bachert; G Walter Canonica; Thomas Chacko; Cemal Cingi; Giorgio Ciprandi; Jacquelynne Corey; Linda S Cox; Peter Socrates Creticos; Adnan Custovic; Cecelia Damask; Adam DeConde; John M DelGaudio; Charles S Ebert; Jean Anderson Eloy; Carrie E Flanagan; Wytske J Fokkens; Christine Franzese; Jan Gosepath; Ashleigh Halderman; Robert G Hamilton; Hans Jürgen Hoffman; Jens M Hohlfeld; Steven M Houser; Peter H Hwang; Cristoforo Incorvaia; Deborah Jarvis; Ayesha N Khalid; Maritta Kilpeläinen; Todd T Kingdom; Helene Krouse; Desiree Larenas-Linnemann; Adrienne M Laury; Stella E Lee; Joshua M Levy; Amber U Luong; Bradley F Marple; Edward D McCoul; K Christopher McMains; Erik Melén; James W Mims; Gianna Moscato; Joaquim Mullol; Harold S Nelson; Monica Patadia; Ruby Pawankar; Oliver Pfaar; Michael P Platt; William Reisacher; Carmen Rondón; Luke Rudmik; Matthew Ryan; Joaquin Sastre; Rodney J Schlosser; Russell A Settipane; Hemant P Sharma; Aziz Sheikh; Timothy L Smith; Pongsakorn Tantilipikorn; Jody R Tversky; Maria C Veling; De Yun Wang; Marit Westman; Magnus Wickman; Mark Zacharek
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Review 4.  Regulator Versus Effector Paradigm: Interleukin-10 as Indicator of the Switching Response.

Authors:  Ervin Ç Mingomataj; Alketa H Bakiri
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6.  Allergen-Specific Cytokine Polarization Protects Shetland Ponies against Culicoides obsoletus-Induced Insect Bite Hypersensitivity.

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7.  Paradoxical increase of IgE binding components during allergen-specific immunotherapy in pollinosis patients.

Authors:  Mi-Ae Kim; Moon-Gyung Yoon; Hyun-Jung Jin; Yoo-Seob Shin; Hae-Sim Park
Journal:  J Korean Med Sci       Date:  2014-07-11       Impact factor: 2.153

Review 8.  Harnessing nanoparticles for immune modulation.

Authors:  Daniel R Getts; Lonnie D Shea; Stephen D Miller; Nicholas J C King
Journal:  Trends Immunol       Date:  2015-06-15       Impact factor: 16.687

9.  Immunotherapy reduces allergen-mediated CD66b expression and myeloperoxidase levels on human neutrophils from allergic patients.

Authors:  Rocio Aroca; Cristina Chamorro; Antonio Vega; Inmaculada Ventura; Elisa Gómez; Ramón Pérez-Cano; Miguel Blanca; Javier Monteseirín
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2014-04-16       Impact factor: 3.240

10.  Immunotherapy using algal-produced Ara h 1 core domain suppresses peanut allergy in mice.

Authors:  James A Gregory; Ariel Shepley-McTaggart; Michelle Umpierrez; Barry K Hurlburt; Soheila J Maleki; Hugh A Sampson; Stephen P Mayfield; M Cecilia Berin
Journal:  Plant Biotechnol J       Date:  2016-01-23       Impact factor: 9.803

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