Abstract

FE-3 cells were established by Hanashiro et al. by hybridizing mouse myeloma cells (Sp2/0-Ag14/SF) with rat spleen cells that were freshly isolated from Brown-Norway rats sensitized with DNP-As. FE-3 cells can constitutively secrete IgE without stimulation by cytokines. Our preliminary experiments demonstrated that the IgE secretion was decreased at 3 days after start of culture and the addition of exogenous IgE into culture media depressed the secretion of IgE. Thus, we hypothesized that the IgE production in FE-3 cells may be regulated by a signal transduction through the binding of IgE to its high affinity receptor (Fc(epsilon)RI) or to an IgE binding protein on the cell surface. In this study, we aimed to identify the nucleotide sequence of IgE FE-3 and compared with those of mouse IgE and IgE IR162 to find a structural heterogeneity in the Fc region of IgE FE-3. We also tested if the mRNA of Fc(epsilon)RI was expressed in FE-3 cells using the reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) method with the combination of sequencing analysis. Consequently, the cDNA sequence of IgE FE-3 was identical to that of the CH3 and CH4 domains in the epsilon-chain of rat IgE IR162, whereas the cDNA of Fc(epsilon)RI was identical to that of mouse, suggesting that the genes of IgE FE-3 and Fc(epsilon)RI was derived from that of rat spleen cells and mouse myeloma cells, respectively.

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