Pathogenic and Nonpathogenic Antibody Responses in Allergic Diseases
Marc Ehlers, Friederike Jönsson

TL;DR
This review explores how some people have allergy-related antibodies without symptoms, and what factors determine whether these antibodies cause allergic disease or not.
Contribution
The paper introduces a two-stage model to explain transitions between nonpathogenic and pathogenic antibody responses in allergic diseases.
Findings
Allergen-specific IgE can exist without causing allergy symptoms in some individuals.
Environmental and inflammatory factors influence the development of pathogenic versus nonpathogenic antibody responses.
Differences in antibody characteristics like glycosylation and IgE/IgG ratios affect disease severity and treatment response.
Abstract
Allergen‐specific antibodies, particularly of the IgE class, are a hallmark of many allergic diseases. Yet paradoxically, (1) a proportion of healthy individuals possess allergen‐specific IgE without clinical signs of allergy; (2) some, but not all, allergic individuals develop a more severe disease over time or fail to respond to allergen‐specific immunotherapy; and (3) allergen‐specific IgG antibodies can inhibit IgE‐mediated responses but they can also induce allergic reactions. In this review, we discuss the occurrence of and transition between nonpathogenic and pathogenic allergen‐specific antibody responses in the light of a two‐stage model. We recapitulate different factors and scenarios that may induce different inflammatory conditions and qualitatively distinct allergen‐specific T‐ and B‐cell responses, influencing IgE origins and affinities, IgE/IgG(4) ratios, IgG effector…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAllergic Rhinitis and Sensitization · Food Allergy and Anaphylaxis Research · Asthma and respiratory diseases
