Abstract

Recently, adhesion molecules have been considered to play an important role in inflammatory processes in bronchial asthma. To extend our understanding of the high-intensity expression of adhesion molecules (CR3, LFA-1 alpha, LFA-1 beta, ICAM-1) on hypodense eosinophils, which was observed in our previous study, we examined whether the supernatant of lymphocytes from mite-allergic asthmatic patients is involved in adhesion molecule expression using an eosinophilic cell line (EoL-1). These characteristics of adhesion molecule expression were induced by the supernatant of lymphocytes obtained from mite-allergic asthmatic patients cultured with specific allergen as well as a combination of recombinant cytokines (IL-3, GM-CSF, IL-5). Thus, we could conclude that some lymphokines produced by specific allergen in asthma might be involved in the high-intensity expression of adhesion molecules on hypodense eosinophils in asthma or allergic disorders.

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