Abstract

Serum concentrations of IgG3 were found to be higher in Gm-f-positive (= b-positive) than in f-negative individuals except in young children. Young children aged 3–4 months had a mean concentration of 0.24 g/l of IgG3 regardless of allotype. The concentration gradually rose with age in f-positive individuals to a geometric mean of 0.56 g/l in adults but it remained essentially unchanged in f-negative people. A corresponding allotype effect was seen in influenza-specific antibody responses. While the total IgG response (mainly IgG1) was equally strong in f-positive and in f-negative patients, f-positive (= b-positive) patients produced more IgG3 antibodies than f-negative patients. The difference between geometric mean values of opposite homozygotes (f/f versus f-negative) was 2.3-fold ( p = 0.0113). This finding indicates that the b-positive γ-3 allele is more productive than the g-positive allele.

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