BIOL 3553 Lecture Notes - Lecture 4: Type I Hypersensitivity, Mast Cell, Immunoglobulin Class Switching

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10 Sep 2018
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Allergy about 1/5 of the population believe they have a food allergy when in reality, about 4-7% of preschool children and 1-2% of adults have a true ige mediated allergy. Allergen is an antigen that causes an allergic reaction. Occurs immediately following second contact with allergen and involves production and action of ige and mast cells. Sensitization phase ige antibody is produced to an antigen. Fc epsilon region binds to mast cells and basophils. Activation phase second exposure to antigen triggers mast cells and basophils to degranulate. Effector phase complex response to effects of inflammatory mediators, which cause increased vascular permeability, bronchoconstriction, and other inflammatory processes. Allergen comes in contact with b cell and th2 cell. B cell proliferates into plasma cells that released ige, th2 cell releases il-4. Fc epsilon regions of ige bind to mast cells. Allergen binds to ige on mast calls and cross-links which means that two antibodies each bind to one antigen.

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