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Topic:Immunoglobulin E

Immunoglobulin E (IgE) is an antibody class involved in the immune response of horses, particularly in allergic reactions and parasitic infections. It binds to allergens and triggers the release of inflammatory mediators from mast cells and basophils. Elevated levels of IgE are often associated with hypersensitivity disorders, such as insect bite hypersensitivity (IBH) in horses. This page assembles peer-reviewed research studies and scholarly articles that investigate the production, regulation, and clinical implications of Immunoglobulin E in equine health, including its role in allergic conditions and potential as a diagnostic marker.
Dermal reactivity to histamine, serotonin and bradykinin in relation to allergic skin reactions of the horse.
Journal of veterinary pharmacology and therapeutics    March 1, 1986   Volume 9, Issue 1 40-48 doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2885.1986.tb00010.x
Morrow A, Quinn PJ, Baker KP.The reactivity of horse skin to intradermal inoculation of histamine, serotonin and bradykinin was investigated, and the resulting reactions compared with those produced in the same horses by a 1% whole-body extract of Culicoides. Both histamine and bradykinin produced large reactions, but there was no significant correlation between the dermal responsiveness to insect allergen and either histamine or bradykinin. Two anti-histamine drugs (promethazine hydrochloride and tripelennamine hydrochloride) were effective in reducing the reaction produced by the insect extract.
Bronchoalveolar lavage in ponies with recurrent airway obstruction (heaves).
The American review of respiratory disease    November 1, 1985   Volume 132, Issue 5 1066-1070 doi: 10.1164/arrd.1985.132.5.1066
Derksen FJ, Scott JS, Miller DC, Slocombe RF, Robinson NE.We performed bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) in 2 groups of ponies. Principal ponies had a history of heaves, a disease characterized by recurrent airway obstruction and airway hyperreactivity when ponies are housed in a barn and fed hay; control ponies had no history of airway obstruction. Ponies were paired (principal and control), and BAL was performed after 2 months of being pastured when principal ponies were in clinical remission (Period A), after barn housing when principal ponies had acute airway obstruction (Period B), and after a 1- and a 2-wk recovery phase of pasture grazing (Periods ...
Studies on equine recurrent uveitis. I: Levels of immunoglobulin and albumin in the aqueous humor of horses with and without intraocular disease.
Current eye research    October 1, 1985   Volume 4, Issue 10 1023-1031 doi: 10.3109/02713688509003347
Halliwell RE, Hines MT.A radioimmunoassay was developed for detection of immunoglobulin in the aqueous of normal horses and horses with intraocular diseases. Levels of albumin were detected by radial immunodiffusion. Results of assays on samples from normal eyes from which aqueous was obtained by paracentesis under anesthesia were 32.10 +/- 21.50 microgram/ml for IgG, 0.05 +/- 0.01 microgram/ml for IgM, 0.04 +/- 0.02 microgram/ml for IgA and 34.0 +/- 38.0 microgram/ml for albumin. Results in 138 normal eyes sampled post mortem were 41.56 +/- 38.65 microgram/ml for IgG, 0.18 +/- 0.43 microgram/ml for IgM, 0.46 +/- 1....
Effect of cycle stage on immunoglobulin concentrations in reproductive tract secretions of the mare.
Journal of reproductive immunology    May 1, 1985   Volume 7, Issue 3 233-242 doi: 10.1016/0165-0378(85)90054-3
Widders PR, Stokes CR, David JS, Bourne FJ.The effect of cycle stage on immunoglobulin and albumin levels in serum, follicular fluid, oviductal, uterine and vaginal secretions was measured. There was no variation in serum immunoglobulin levels during the oestrous cycle, although IgM levels were elevated in cyclic mares compared to non-cyclic (immature and anoestrous) animals. Similarly, there was no cyclical variation in follicular or oviductal protein concentrations. In the uterus, IgG and IgA levels relative to total protein were higher in oestrogenic than in progestagenic secretions, while the trend in relative IgM concentrations wa...
The occurrence of and exposure to animal allergens.
Allergy    January 1, 1985   Volume 40 Suppl 3 37-39 
Schwartz B.No abstract available
Sources of allergens in animals.
Allergy    January 1, 1985   Volume 40 Suppl 3 51-53 doi: 10.1111/j.1398-9995.1985.tb04300.x
Vanto T.No abstract available
Immunoglobulin levels in tears and aqueous humor of horses before and after diethylcarbamazine (DEC) therapy.
Veterinary immunology and immunopathology    September 1, 1984   Volume 7, Issue 2 185-198 doi: 10.1016/0165-2427(84)90018-7
Glaze MB, McGuire TC, Schmidt GM, Leid RW.A quantitative investigation of equine tear and aqueous humor immunoglobulins was done using normal horses and ponies as well as horses and ponies infected with Onchocerca cervicalis. The equine immunoglobulin isotypes IgGa, IgM, IgA and IgG(T) were quantitated by either single radial immunodiffusion (SRID) or radioimmunoassay (RIA). Tear immunoglobulin levels for IgGa (128 +/- 151 micrograms/ml), IgA (1,664 +/- 1,038 micrograms/ml) and IgM (106 +/- 74 micrograms/ml) were measured, while IgG(T) was not detectable. In horses with ocular inflammation the IgGa was 18-fold higher in the tears, 2,2...
Further purification and characterisation of horse IgE.
Veterinary immunology and immunopathology    July 1, 1983   Volume 4, Issue 5-6 545-553 doi: 10.1016/0165-2427(83)90063-6
Suter M, Fey H.Horse IgE was isolated from a serum pool collected from foals naturally infected with endoparasites. The serum was precipitated with ammonium sulfate, delipidated with dextran sulfate and further purified by gel filtration, anionic exchange, immunosorption or preparative polyacrylamide gelelectrophoresis. By these methods IgE could be isolated at a purity of 81%. The sera from rabbits immunized with the purified horse serum fractions were tested using reversed passive cutaneous anaphylaxis and an enzyme linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA). By the ELISA method cross reaction of rabbit anti horse...
Sweet itch: responses of clinically normal and affected horses to intradermal challenge with extracts of biting insects.
Equine veterinary journal    July 1, 1983   Volume 15, Issue 3 266-272 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1983.tb01788.x
Quinn PJ, Baker KP, Morrow AN.In a study of the skin reactivity of horses with lesions of sweet itch, six clinically normal horses and seven affected horses were challenged intradermally with extracts of Culicoides, Stomoxys, Tabanidae and Culex species. All the affected horses and three of the normal horses responded strongly to the culicoides extract. The skin reactions in the affected horses reached their maxima within 4 h in the majority of animals. Skin reactivity to culicoides was transferred to normal horses with serum from affected animals confirming that the reaction was an immediate hypersensitivity reaction. Thr...
Allergen-specific ELISA for horse IgE.
Veterinary immunology and immunopathology    July 1, 1983   Volume 4, Issue 5-6 555-564 doi: 10.1016/0165-2427(83)90064-8
Suter M, Fey H.An enzyme-linked immuno sorbent assay (ELISA) for measuring horse IgE specific to ovalbumin, bencylpenicilloic acid and odinitrocarboxyphenol is described. We used a sandwich type of ELISA by which horse serum was incubated in antigen-coated tubes containing one additional polystyrene ball, followed by rabbit anti horse IgE serum. The tubes were then incubated with biotinylated goat anti rabbit globulin followed by avidin coupled to phosphatase. Endpoint titrations were compared. The ELISA is highly reproducible due to the pretreatment of the polystyrene with glutaraldehyde. The increased anti...
Immunosuppression associated with lymphosarcoma in two horses.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    June 1, 1983   Volume 182, Issue 11 1239-1241 
Dopson LC, Reed SM, Roth JA, Perryman LE, Hitchcock P.No abstract available
Epidemiological and immunological studies of sweet itch in horses in Israel.
The Veterinary record    May 28, 1983   Volume 112, Issue 22 521-524 doi: 10.1136/vr.112.22.521
Braverman Y, Ungar-Waron H, Frith K, Adler H, Danieli Y, Baker KP, Quinn PJ.A survey of sweet itch in horses in Israel based on a questionnaire to owners reported that 158 of 723 horses (21.8 per cent) had sweet itch lesions. The results indicated that the likelihood of a horse acquiring sweet itch decreased with increasing altitude but no definite association with rainfall zones was evident. Variation in the density of the horse population, however, obscured these observations. In the population surveyed, stallions were more sensitive than mares and pale horses appeared to be less sensitive than dark ones, but the sample size of this latter group was much smaller. In...
A reagin-like antibody in horse serum. II. Anti-human IgE induced reversed cutaneous anaphylaxis-like responses in horse skin.
Veterinary research communications    March 1, 1983   Volume 6, Issue 2 111-122 doi: 10.1007/BF02214903
Matthews AG, Imlah P, McPherson EA.Fc specific anti-human IgE serum induced prolonged reversed cutaneous anaphylaxis (RCA)-like reactions in horse skin. Morphologically and histologically, these reactions resembled passively induced late cutaneous anaphylaxis responses in human skin, but differed from reversed passive Arthus responses induced in horse skin using anti-horse IgG serum. The induction of RCA-like responses in horse skin by anti-human IgE indicates shared Fc antigenic determinants on human IgE and a horse homocytotropic or reagin-like antibody.
A reagin-like antibody in horse serum: 1. Occurrence and some biological properties.
Veterinary research communications    January 1, 1983   Volume 6, Issue 1 13-23 doi: 10.1007/BF02214891
Matthews AG, Imlah P, McPherson EA.The demonstration of a reagin-like antibody against Culicoides pulicaris extract in the serum of horses and ponies affected with recurrent seasonal dermatitis (sweet itch) is reported. This antibody can confer Prauznitz-Küstner (P-K) sensitivity on homologous skin for up to 5 days and, like human IgE, is thermolabile and susceptible to 2-mercaptoethanol reduction. It is eluted on diethylaminoethyl dextran-52 anion exchange chromatography independently of IgG, IgG(T) and IgM, and its elution characteristics indicate similarity in net molecular charge to human IgE. The P-K response observed in ...
Radioimmunoassay for the detection of antigen-specific IgM, IgG, and IgA in equine sera.
American journal of veterinary research    February 1, 1982   Volume 43, Issue 2 294-298 
Rearden TP, Sprouse RF, Garner HE.A radioimmunoassay was developed to discriminate immunoglobulin (Ig) classes specific for the J-5 mutant of Escherichia coli (serotype O:111-B4). Adult horses were periodically inoculated IM with a nonviable suspension of the J-5 mutant emulsified in Freund's incomplete adjuvant. Before and after the horses were inoculated, sera were collected sequentially and examined by radioimmunoassay. Rabbit anti-(horse) Ig and [125I]protein A served as the indicator system. Antigen-specific IgM, IgG, and IgA were observed to follow a classic immune response. The radioimmunoassay offers a valuable tool fo...
Isolation and characterization of equine IgE.
Zentralblatt fur Veterinarmedizin. Reihe B. Journal of veterinary medicine. Series B    January 1, 1981   Volume 28, Issue 5 414-420 doi: 10.1111/j.1439-0450.1981.tb01930.x
Suter M, Fey H.No abstract available
Immunologic aspects of combined immunodeficiency disease in Arabian foals.
American journal of veterinary research    August 1, 1980   Volume 41, Issue 8 1161-1166 
Lew AM, Hosking CS, Studdert MJ.Tests for T- and B-cell quantitation and immune function were developed, and their application in the diagnosis of primary severe combined immunodeficiency disease (CID) in Arabian foals was investigated. Foals with CID had severe lymphopenia and had small or zero numbers of B cells, as shown by immunofluorescence of surface immunoglobulin (Ig), erythrocyte-antibody-complement rosetting, and staphylococcal protein A rosetting. Serum IgM was undetectable in four CID foals 25 to 71 days old. Demonstrable antibody responses were not elicited in CID foals by phage phi X-174, a potent antigen in no...
Pharmacological and immunological aspects of histamine release from horse leucocytes.
International archives of allergy and applied immunology    January 1, 1980   Volume 62, Issue 4 397-408 doi: 10.1159/000232542
Kings MA, de Weck AL.Pharmacological histamine releasing agents, such as compound 48/80, poly-L-lysine, adrenocorticotrophic hormone (ACTH; beta 1-24 available commercially as Synacthen), catecholamines, purine bases, etc., are well known to induce histamine release from rat peritoneal mast cells and mast cells of other species; and to a lesser extent from peripheral blood leucocytes. It is reported in this paper that several of these potent histamine-releasing agents induce little or no histamine release from horse leucocytes. In particular the calcium ionophore A 23187 induced no histamine release. On the other ...
Viral respiratory disease.
The Veterinary clinics of North America. Large animal practice    May 1, 1979   Volume 1, Issue 1 59-72 doi: 10.1016/s0196-9846(17)30198-2
Coggins L.No abstract available
The role of allergy in chronic pulmonary disease of horses.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    February 1, 1979   Volume 174, Issue 3 277-281 
Halliwell RE, Fleischman JB, Mackay-Smith M, Beech J, Gunson DE.Twenty-five horses with chronic pulmonary disease were skin tested with allergenic extracts of 24 molds, 4 thermophilic actinomyces, barn dust, hay dust, soya-bean mill dust, and grain mill dust. The results were compared with those obtained on 25 normal horses. Between the 2 groups of horses, there was a highly significant difference in positive skin test results at 30 minutes and 4 hours.
A report on clinical aspects and histopathology of sweet itch.
Equine veterinary journal    October 1, 1978   Volume 10, Issue 4 243-248 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1978.tb02271.x
Baker KP, Quinn PJ.Sweet itch is an intensely pruritic dermatitis of horses recurring annually in Ireland from April to November. The tissue changes of sweet itch have similarities to immediate-type hypersensitivity reactions which occur in skin sensitised to the saliva of bloodsucking insects. There was subepidermal oedema, and marked eosinophilia; the blood vessels were tortuous and enlarged. Microfilaria were not found in serial sections of lesions of 5 affected horses. The histopathology of the immediate dermal remal reaction to the intradermal injection of Culicoides extract shows dermal vasodilation and eo...
Characterization and chemical modification of isolated allergens from horse hair and dandruff.
International archives of allergy and applied immunology    January 1, 1978   Volume 57, Issue 4 349-357 doi: 10.1159/000232124
Løwenstein H.No abstract available
RAST in the diagnosis of hypersensitivity to horse allergens. A comparison with clinical history and in vivo tests.
Clinical allergy    September 1, 1977   Volume 7, Issue 5 455-464 doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2222.1977.tb01476.x
Leegaard J, Roth A.Case history, skin tests and RAST were compared in a group (n = 40) of children with a history suggesting allergy to horses and in a group (n = 43) in whom there was no suspicion of hypersensitivity to horses. There was an agreement of 91% between case history and prick test. The same magnitude of agreement was found between case history and RAST (89%), and the agreement between RAST and prick test was 90%. The results of this investigation are clearly in contrast to earlier earlier reports, in that there was a very good correlation between prick test, RAST and case history. The results sugges...
Bovine reaginic antibody III. Cross-reaction of antihuman IgE and antibovine reaginic immunoglobulin antisera with sera from several species of mammals. Nielsen KH.Using antisera specific for the heavy chain of human IgE and bovine reaginic immunoglobulin, the degree of cross-reaction amongst sera from pig, rat, rabbit, guinea pig, goat, cow, horse, dog, cat and human was tested. Antihuman IgE antiserum gave strong reactions with pig, rabbit, cow, goat and human sera (100% to 15.1%) and weak reactions with rat, guinea pig, horse, dog and cat sera (10.1% to 3.22%). Antibovine reagin antiserum produced a considerable amount of cross-reaction with sera from pig, rat, rabbit, goat, horse and human (43.6% to 20.1%) with limited reactions with guinea pig, dog ...
“Sweet itch”.
The Veterinary record    September 11, 1976   Volume 99, Issue 11 222 doi: 10.1136/vr.99.11.222-a
Ross RF.No abstract available
Chemical mediators of anaphylaxis (histamine, 5-HT, and SRS-A) released from horse lung and leukocytes in vitro.
Research communications in chemical pathology and pharmacology    March 1, 1976   Volume 13, Issue 3 379-388 
Burka JF, Deline TR, Holroyde MC, Eyre P.Horses were sensitized to bovine plasma in Freund's complete adjuvant. Leukocytes, separated from venous blood, yielded histamine upon incubation with bovine plasma. Ioslated lung fragments incubated with bovine plasma liberated histamine and 5-HT, but not SRS-A. Pulmonary veins obtained from the same animals contracted to histamine, 5-HT and to antigen (Schultz-Dale reaction). Histamine and 5-HT probably contribute to immediate-type hypersensitivity in horses whereas the role of SRS-A is not proved.
Isolation and partial characterization of three major allergens of horse hair and dandruff.
International archives of allergy and applied immunology    January 1, 1976   Volume 51, Issue 1 48-67 doi: 10.1159/000231578
Løowenstein H, Markussen B, Weeke B.Three major allergens of horse hair and dandruff have been isolated. The fractionation procedures involved various combinations, described in detail, of ethanol precipitation below --5degreesC, cation- and anion-exchange chromatography, and gel filtration. UV absorption, quantitative immunoelectrophoresis and RAST inhibition were used to monitor the separations. Protein impurities constituted less than 5% in all cases. The molecular weights of the isolated proteins were 1.9 X 10(4), 5.1 X 10(4) and 3.1 X 10(4) daltons, respectively. The pIs were determined as 4.1, 3.8 and 3.9, respectively. Th...
Identification of allergens in extract of horse hair and dandruff by means of crossed radioimmunoelectrophoresis.
International archives of allergy and applied immunology    January 1, 1976   Volume 51, Issue 1 38-47 doi: 10.1159/000231577
Løwenstein H, Markussen B, Weeke B.Sera from 26 patients and 4 normals were examined for specific IgE binding to antigens of extract of horse hair and dandruff by means of CRIE. 22 of the patients were RAST- and intracutaneous-positive to horse extract. 4 more of the patients were RAST-negative to horse allergens, but showed allergies to extract of allergens from sources other than horse. The remaining four sera from controls were RAST-negative to horse and had no history of allergy. Antigens of horse hair and dandruff showed a significantly higher degree of binding to specific IgE in the sera from the first group of patients t...
[Case of bronchial asthma caused by hypersensitivity to equine epidermis antigens (clinical and immunological analysis)].
Wiadomosci lekarskie (Warsaw, Poland : 1960)    June 15, 1975   Volume 28, Issue 12 1055-1059 
Romański B, Montowska L, Wilewska T, Zbikowska M.No abstract available
Separation of the immunosuppressive and glomerular basement membrane-reactive antibodies in horse antiserum to human thymus.
Transplantation    February 1, 1974   Volume 17, Issue 2 188-193 doi: 10.1097/00007890-197402000-00006
Wilson S, Sakac E, Logan L.No abstract available