Abstract

Bullous pemphigoid blister fluid (BP-BF) was examined for its effects on the density, morphology, and biological properties of eosinophils. Normodense eosinophils (NEo) were prepared from guinea pig peritoneal exudates by Nycodenz density gradient centrifugation. After culturing with BP-BF, NEo were converted into hypodense eosinophils (HEo) in a time-dependent manner. HEo were morphologically different from NEo in that HEo had spheroidal granules each with a lytic crystalloid core and a significantly increased cell volume. These HEo showed an enhanced antibody- and/or complement-dependent helminthotoxic activity to Schistosoma mansoni larvae, amplified chemiluminescence response to opsonized zymosan, and augmented expression of both FcR+ and CR+. These results suggest that BP-BF contains an activity that may not only induce an eosinophil hypodensity as a consequence of increasing cell volume, but simultaneously enhance an eosinophil cytotoxic potential through augmenting cell-surface receptors and receptor-linked oxidative metabolism. In addition, observed tissue accumulation of this activity suggests that eosinophils may be regulated by their phenotypic change in the skin lesions of bullous pemphigoid and be involved in blister formation.

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