Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0043167 (pertussis)
19,595 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The effects of adenosine (A) and the nonmetabolizable adenosine analogs, N-ethylcarboxamidoadenosine (NECA), L-phenylisopropyladenosine (L-PIA), D-PIA and 2-chloroadenosine (2CHA) were examined on the IgE-dependent mediator release from RBL-2H3 cells, a model for mast-cell function. Adenosine and the adenosine analogs failed to influence mediator release from cells, previously sensitized with monoclonal anti-TNP mouse immunoglobulin E (anti-TNP IgE), when added alone. When added prior to conjugated trinitrophenol-ovalbumin (TNP-OVA), adenosine and the adenosine analogs (10(-8)-10(-4) M) significantly potentiated the release of both histamine (marker for degranulation) and peptidoleukotrienes (LT) (marker for de novo synthesized mediators). The effects were concentration-dependent with the potency order being L-PIA greater than NECA greater than A greater than D-PIA, 2CHA. The stimulatory effect on both histamine and LT release were reversed by prior treatment of the cells with pertussis toxin but not by the purinoceptor antagonists, theophylline and 8-phenyltheophylline, nor adenosine uptake blockers. At higher concentrations (above 10(-5) M), adenosine and adenosine analogs were also inhibitory on LT but not on histamine release. This inhibition was more evident on pertussis-toxin-treated cells in which there was no effect of adenosine or adenosine analogs on histamine release, but a concentration-dependent inhibition of IgE-dependent LT release. These findings demonstrate that adenosine analogs have two distinct mechanisms on mediator release from RBL-2H3 cells; a stimulatory effect on both histamine and LT release, mediated via a pertussis-toxin-sensitive G protein and an inhibitory effect on LT release via a pertussis-toxin-insensitive pathway. An abstract of this work has been published.
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PMID:Pertussis toxin pretreatment reveals differential effects of adenosine analogs on IgE-dependent histamine and peptidoleukotriene release from RBL-2H3 cells. 216 18

Total serum IgE levels were evaluated in 20 children with pertussis. Increased levels of serum IgE were observed in the group of children between the ages of 3 and 12 years, while normal levels of serum IgE were detected in the groups of children between birth and 24 months old and between 13 and 24 months old. A further and significant increment of serum IgE levels was also found after 10 days of hospitalization.
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PMID:Total serum IgE levels in children with pertussis. 230 33

WBB6F1 mouse, a mast cell-deficient strain, was tested for active and passive cutaneous anaphylactic reactions. Active cutaneous anaphylaxis was not produced in mice which had been immunized for 1 to 2 weeks by an intraperitoneal injection of bovine serum albumin with either adjuvant, Freund's complete adjuvant or Bordetella pertussis organisms, even though circulatory IgE and IgG1 antibodies were raised. Passive cutaneous anaphylaxis (PCA) was also absent, when the mice had been sensitized with allogeneic IgE or IgG1 monoclonal antibodies. However, obvious PCA was produced when allogeneic or xenogeneic hyperimmune serum was employed. These findings indicate that mast cells are not necessarily needed for the production of PCA. Some mechanism quite different from the well-elucidated mechanism, i.e., IgE- or IgG1 antibody-triggered histamine release from mast cells, seems to be operative.
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PMID:Active and passive cutaneous anaphylaxis in WBB6F1 mouse, a mast cell-deficient strain. 236 26

Twelve non-atopic and 27 atopic preschool children were studied to determine the effect of pertussis booster vaccination on cutaneous histamine sensitivity and IgE antibody response to the naturally-occurring ragweed aeroallergen. Prick tests of histamine and ragweed extract, as well as ragweed-RAST, were performed prior to, and after, their booster injections. Ragweed skin tests and RAST were not repeated until 2 weeks after the end of ragweed pollination. None of the parameters changed significantly in either group regardless of the type of immunization administered.
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PMID:Pertussis booster vaccination and immediate hypersensitivity. 240 47

The present study examines the influence of Freund's complete adjuvant (FCA) injections on sensitized PVG rats with respect to serum levels of IgE and IgG2 alpha antibodies and total IgE (all assessed by radioimmunoassays) and the capacity of serosal mast cells to release histamine on challenge in vitro with 'immunological' secretagogues (specific antigen, anti-IgE, concanavalin A) or with compound 48/80. The rats were immunized with 10 micrograms ovalbumin (OA); alum, Bordetella pertussis vaccine, or silica gel were employed as adjuvants. Treatment with FCA was performed by single intraperitoneal injections 3, 2, or 1 week(s) before or 1 or 2 weeks after sensitization. Tests were conducted 3 weeks after sensitization. The results show that the effect of FCA treatment varied reproducibly with the adjuvant employed for sensitization and with the timing of the FCA administration. FCA treatment could either increase, fail to affect, or decrease total serum IgE and OA-IgG2 alpha antibody levels as well as serosal mast cell responsiveness, whereas OA-IgE antibody responses were decreased or not affected. Moreover, serum levels of OA-IgE and OA-IgG2 alpha antibodies and total IgE were affected by FCA treatment independently of each other. Finally, serosal mast cell responsiveness to a given secretagogue could be influenced by the FCA treatment apparently independently of that to other secretagogues. A salient finding was that effects of FCA treatment on mast cell responsiveness did not necessarily conform to effects on antibody synthesis. Collectively, these data support the opinion that the mechanisms of action of the IgE-promoting adjuvants employed differ and suggest that the expression of serosal mast cell responsiveness to each examined secretagogue can be regulated separately. They also suggest that the serosal mast cell sensitizing capacity of homocytotropic antibodies may not be adequately quantified by immunochemical methods employing reagents prepared against IgE and IgG2 alpha protein.
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PMID:Modulatory effects of Freund's adjuvant treatment on mast cell histamine release and homocytotropic antibody synthesis. 241 66

2',5'-Dideoxyadenoside (DDA) inhibited both anti-IgE and ionophore A23187 induced histamine secretion from human basophils. Whereas DDA inhibited IgE-dependent histamine secretion when added at all times prior to challenge, release induced by A23187 was inhibited only with simultaneous addition of DDA and secretagogue. Dipyridamole, but not theophylline, abrogated DDA mediated inhibition of histamine release suggesting an intracellular mechanism of action of DDA. The observations that 2'-deoxyadenosine and 9-beta-D-arabinofuranosyladenine also inhibited release suggest that the its inhibitory effect was enhanced by manganese and reversed by islet activating protein from Bordetella pertussis suggest that DDA inhibits basophil histamine release by interacting with a guanine nucleotide binding protein which may be linked to either adenylate cyclase or other second messenger system(s).
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PMID:Inhibition of immunological and nonimmunological histamine release from human basophils by adenosine analogues that act at P-sites. 242 53

We have found that basophils (n = 9) treated with pertussis toxin (1.0 microgram/ml) fail to respond to a subsequent challenge with either 1.0 microM f-Met peptide (p less than 0.0005) or 0.24 microgram/ml of C5a (p less than 0.0005) although their responses to anti-IgE (0.1 microgram/ml) and A23187 (1.0 microgram/ml) were unaltered. These results were confirmed in purified (average purity = 89 +/- 3%) basophils (n = 4). Leukotriene C4 release was also reduced to 15 +/- 5% of control (p less than 0.005) when pertussis toxin-treated basophils were exposed to 1.0 microM f-Met peptide, although no inhibition was noted when anti-IgE or A23187 were used as the stimuli. The effect of pertussis toxin on basophils appears to be independent of the presence of contaminating mononuclear cells. We found that pertussis toxin inhibited f-Met peptide-induced histamine release regardless of the magnitude of the stimulus (0.01 microM to 1.0 microM f-Met peptide), although anti-IgE-induced release was unaffected over a dose-response curve. The effect of pertussis toxin was found to be both time- and concentration-dependent. The maximum effects were obtained after a 3-hr incubation with 1 microgram/ml of toxin. Lower (0.01 to 0.05 microgram/ml) concentrations of toxin or shorter (30 to 60 min) incubation periods did not significantly (p greater than 0.05) inhibit mediator release.
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PMID:The effect of pertussis toxin on mediator release from human basophils. 243 48

Bone marrow-derived mouse mast cells were sensitized with monoclonal mouse IgE antibody and treated with cholera toxin (CT), which ADP-ribosylated the alpha-subunit of the stimulatory guanine nucleotide-binding regulatory protein Gs, prior to challenge with either antigen or thrombin. The CT treatment increased intracellular cAMP levels, but neither enhanced nor inhibited antigen-induced histamine release or arachidonate release. The same treatment of the sensitized bone marrow-derived mouse mast cells with CT markedly enhanced thrombin-induced histamine release without affecting arachidonate release. The CT treatment failed to affect antigen-induced and thrombin-induced generation of inositol trisphosphate and of diacylglycerol or mobilization of intracellular Ca2+. The results indicate that Gs in bone marrow-derived mouse mast cells is not involved in the transduction of the antigen-induced or thrombin-induced triggering signal to phospholipase C, which initiates the enhancement of phosphatidylinositol turnover. The enhancement of thrombin-induced histamine release by CT treatment with the observations that thrombin-induced histamine release was inhibited by pretreatment of the cells with pertussis toxin suggest that the involvement of a guanine nucleotide-binding regulatory protein in thrombin-induced biochemical events is an event distal to Ca2+ mobilization.
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PMID:Effect of cholera toxin on histamine release from bone marrow-derived mouse mast cells. 245 25

Rat mast cells and bone marrow-derived mouse mast cells (BMMC) were sensitized with mouse IgE mAb, and permeabilized by ATP to introduce guanosine-5'-O-(3-thiotriphosphate) (GTP gamma S) and/or guanosine-5'-O-(2-thiodiphosphate) (GDP beta S) into the cells. After ATP-induced lesions were resealed with Mg2+, the cells were challenged by Ag to determine the effect of the nonhydrolyzable guanosine phosphate on Ag-induced hydrolysis of phosphoinositides and histamine release. Introduction of GTP gamma S into permeabilized rat mast cells or BMMC, followed by exposure of the cells to extracellular Ca2+, resulted in histamine release, but failed to induce hydrolysis of phosphoinositides. It was also found that introduction of GTP gamma S into the cells did not synergistically enhance Ag-induced histamine release. Introduction of GDP beta S into sensitized BMMC inhibited the GTP gamma S-dependent, Ca2+-induced histamine release but failed to inhibit Ag-induced histamine release. The results suggest that GTP gamma S-dependent, Ca2+-induced histamine release and Ag-induced histamine release go through independent biochemical pathways. It was also found that introduction of GTP gamma S or GDP beta S into sensitized BMMC neither enhanced nor inhibited Ag-induced formation of inositol phosphates. These results together with previous findings that pretreatment of BMMC with either pertussis toxin or cholera toxin does not affect Ag-induced hydrolysis of phosphoinositides, indicate that a G protein is not involved in the transduction of IgE-mediated triggering signals to phospholipase C in rodent mast cells.
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PMID:Effect of nonhydrolyzable guanosine phosphate on IgE-mediated activation of phospholipase C and histamine release from rodent mast cells. 247 37

Immunization of mice with 2,4-dinitrophenyl-Bordetella pertussis (DNP-BP) failed to induce anti-DNP IgE responses. Administration of DNP-BP induced, however, the formation of anti-DNP IgE B memory cells, as demonstrated by adoptive transfer. Furthermore, mice pretreated with DNP-BP and primed with 2 micrograms DNP-ovalbumin (OA) in alum 2 weeks later produced high day-7 anti-DNP IgE levels. These subsided to near undetectable levels by day 12-14. The transient expression of serum IgE levels was accompanied by normal levels of anti-DNP IgG. The anti-OA response induced as a result of priming with DNP-OA in alum was not affected by pretreatment with DNP-BP. IgG subclass analysis revealed that mice pretreated with DNP-BP had elevated levels of IgG2a and reduced levels of IgG1 as compared to control (TNP-keyhole limpet hemocyanin-pretreated) mice. Treatment of mice with an anti-interferon-gamma monoclonal antibody, shortly after immunization with DNP-BP, not only reduced anti-DNP IgG2a levels, but prevented the sharp anti-DNP IgE decline that occurred after priming with DNP-OA in alum. These results suggest that DNP-BP-induced interferon-gamma production modulates Ig isotype expression in vivo in an anti-gen-specific manner.
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PMID:Role of interferon-gamma in the modulation of the IgE response by 2,4-dinitrophenyl-Bordetella pertussis vaccine in the mouse. 249 68


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