| Literature DB >> 26892721 |
Louisa K James1, Stephen J Till2.
Abstract
IgG4 is the least abundant IgG subclass in human serum, representing less than 5% of all IgG. Increases in IgG4 occur following chronic exposure to antigen and are generally associated with states of immune tolerance. In line with this, IgG4 is regarded as an anti-inflammatory antibody with a limited ability to elicit effective immune responses. Furthermore, IgG4 attenuates allergic responses by inhibiting the activity of IgE. The mechanism by which IgG4 inhibits IgE-mediated hypersensitivity has been investigated using a variety of model systems leading to two proposed mechanisms. First by sequestering antigen, IgG4 can function as a blocking antibody, preventing cross-linking of receptor bound IgE. Second IgG4 has been proposed to co-stimulate the inhibitory IgG receptor FcγRIIb, which can negatively regulate FcεRI signaling and in turn inhibit effector cell activation. Recent advances in our understanding of the structural features of human IgG4 have shed light on the unique functional and immunologic properties of IgG4. The aim of this review is to evaluate our current understanding of IgG4 biology and reassess the mechanisms by which IgG4 functions to inhibit IgE-mediated allergic responses.Entities:
Keywords: Allergen immunotherapy; Allergy; Blocking antibodies; Hypersensitivity; IgE; IgG4
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26892721 PMCID: PMC4759210 DOI: 10.1007/s11882-016-0600-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Allergy Asthma Rep ISSN: 1529-7322 Impact factor: 4.806
Cellular expression and relative binding affinities of human Fcγ receptors
| Receptor | Cellular expression | IgG1 | IgG2 | IgG3 | IgG4 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| FcγRI/CD64 | Monocytes, macrophages, DC, neutrophilsa, mast cellsa | ++++ | – | ++++ | ++++ |
| FcγRIIa/CD32a | Monocytes, macrophages, DC, basophils, mast cells, eosinophils, platelets | +++ | ++ | +++ | ++ |
| FcγRIIb/CD32b | B cells, DC, basophils, neutrophils subsets of monocytes and macrophages | + | – | ++ | + |
| FcγRIIc/CD32c | NK cells, monocytes, macrophages and neutrophils | + | – | ++ | + |
| FcγRIIIa/CD16a | Natural killer (NK) cells, monocytes and macrophages | +++ | +/- | ++++ | +/- |
| FcγRIIIb/CD16b | Neutrophils subsets of basophils | +++ | – | +++ | – |
| FcγRn | Monocytes, macrophages, DC, neutrophils, epithelial cells, endothelial cells | ++++ | ++++ | ++++ | ++++ |
There are two polymorphic variants of FcγRIIa (131H and 131R) with similar binding properties. FcγRIIIa has two polymorphic variants (158V and 158F). IgG2 and IgG4 bind only to FcγRIIIa158V and only as immune complexes, whereas IgG1 and IgG3 bind to both variants with high affinity [6]. IgG binding to FcγRn only occurs at pH < 6.5 but it binds to all IgG subclasses [60]
aInduced following activation
Fig. 1Continued reduction in symptom and medication scores 2 years after withdrawal of grass pollen immunotherapy is accompanied by persisting IgG4-mediated inhibitory activity against IgE-FAP. a Symptom and medication scores at baseline, after 2 years of allergen immunotherapy and 2 years after stopping treatment. b Inhibition of IgE-FAP by sera taken at baseline, after 2 years of allergen immunotherapy and 2 years after stopping treatment. c Serum grass pollen-specific IgG4 measured by ELISA at baseline, after 2 years of allergen immunotherapy and 2 years after stopping treatment. d Inhibition of IgE-FAP by mock-depleted or IgG4-depleted serum taken after 2 years of allergen immunotherapy. e Inhibition of IgE-FAP by mock-depleted or IgG4-depleted serum taken 2 years after stopping treatment. Figure reproduced with permission from Reference 38