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Test of a theory relating to the cross-linking of IgE antibody on the surface of human basophils
Authors:D W MacGlashan  M Dembo  B Goldstein
Abstract:Recent mathematical models of bivalent hapten-induced histamine release from basophils predict that under appropriate conditions histamine release is maximum when cross-link formation is maximum, at a hapten concentration equal to 1/(2Ka), where Ka is the average affinity constant of the hapten for a single IgE binding site. To test this prediction we sensitized human basophils with a monoclonal anti-dinitrophenol IgE and generated histamine release dose-response curves with a bivalent hapten, alpha, epsilon-DNP-lysine. The monoclonal IgE has a published affinity constant of 7.1 X 10(7) M-1 for epsilon-DNP-lysine as determined by equilibrium dialysis. From the position of the maximum of the histamine dose-response curves, both in the presence and in the absence of monovalent DNP hapten, we determine that the sensitizing IgE has an intrinsic affinity constant of 6.9 +/- 0.5 X 10(7) M-1 for epsilon-DNP-lysine and 1.2 +/- 0.6 X 10(6) M-1 for alpha-DNP-lysine. The agreement between the two estimates of the epsilon-DNP-lysine affinity constant, one from histamine release experiments involving surface bound IgE and one from binding experiments involving IgE free in solution, 1) is consistent with a central prediction of the theory of cross-linking and 2) indicates that the hapten-binding properties of the IgE are unaffected by its being bound to Fc epsilon receptors on the basophil surface.
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