Abstract

Total intestinal IgE level increased in rats infected with Trichinella spiralis or Heligmosomoides polygyrus (peak levels of 2.6 microg and 3.7 microg, respectively), but not in rats infected with Nippostrongylus brasiliensis. Intestinal implantation of young adult N. brasiliensis did not stimulate an intestinal immunoglobulin (Ig)E response, suggesting that mucosal penetration may be required for local intestinal IgE responses in rats. During a T. spiralis infection, total IgE levels in the intestinal lumen were consistently higher in LEWIS and LOU rats (rat strains that eliminate T. spiralis worms earlier in the infection) than in PVG, AO and WKA/H strain rats. There was no correlation in either the total level of serum IgE and IgA, or of intestinal IgA with differences between strains in the rate of worm elimination from the gut. Furthermore, the intestinal IgE immunoprecipitated from LEWIS rats 12 days after infection reacted with T. spiralis adult worm metabolic antigens, while intestinal IgE from PVG rats only became reactive with adult worm metabolic antigens from 14 days after infection. These data emphasize the significance of the intestinal IgE response and its unique features by comparison with serum IgE and IgA or intestinal IgA.

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