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Clinical and Diagnostic Laboratory Immunology, March 2000, p. 131-140, Vol. 7, No. 2
1071-412X/00/$04.00+0
Copyright © 2000, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
MINIREVIEW
Immunoglobulin D: Properties, Measurement, and
Clinical Relevance
Adrian O.
Vladutiu*
Departments of Pathology, Microbiology and
Medicine, SUNY at Buffalo School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences,
Kaleida Health/Buffalo General Hospital, Buffalo, New York 14203
 |
INTRODUCTION |
Discovered in 1965 (134), immunoglobulin D (IgD) is a
unique immunoglobulin with a concentration in serum far below those of
IgG, IgA, and IgM but much higher than that of IgE. Despite studies
extending for more than 4 decades, a specific role for serum IgD has
not been defined while for IgD bound to the membrane of many B
lymphocytes, several functions have been proposed (15). The
amount of serum IgD is measured routinely in some clinical laboratories, almost always together with the concentrations of IgG,
IgA, and IgM, although the clinical relevance of increased or decreased
serum IgD values (in comparison to the reference interval or so-called
normal range) has not been proven. The serendipitous discovery of an
increased serum IgD concentration during attacks of some patients with
periodic episodes of fever (156) led to a renewed search for
a specific role of serum IgD. Hence, I assessed again the clinical
relevance of measuring serum IgD concentration (161). This
minireview summarizes the properties of human IgD and focuses more on
techniques for its measurement in serum and other body fluids and its
concentration in the serum of healthy individuals, as well as in that
of subjects with various diseases. Because IgD was first found in a
patient with multiple myeloma (134), monoclonal IgD is also
briefly discussed. Hyperimmunoglobulinemia D syndrome (HIDS), the only
entity for which the measurement of polyclonal IgD is necessary for
diagnosis, is also very succinctly reviewed. Recent advances focus on
genes for IgD, membrane-bound IgD on B cells, signal transduction via
the IgD receptor, secretion of IgD by plasma cells, and the role of IgD
in T-B-cell interactions; most of the information on secreted (serum)
IgD came from older studies.
 |
PROPERTIES OF IGD AND ITS ROLE IN THE IMMUNE RESPONSE |
IgD represents about 0.25% of the
total serum immunoglobulins and has an Mr of
185,000 and a half-life of 2.8 days (131), similar to that
of IgE (162). Its synthesis rate is at least 10 times lower
than that of IgA, IgM, and IgG. The turnover rate is 37% of the
intravascular pool per day, much higher than that of IgG, IgA, and IgM
(131) but less than that of IgE (162). The
catabolism of IgD is decreased at high concentrations in serum. Initially, it was considered that about 75% of IgD was intravascular (131) but more recently it was shown in two patients with
IgD myeloma that only 31.5% of IgD was intravascular (3).
The IgD molecule has a long "hinge" region (between Fab and Fc)
that appears to render the molecule very susceptible to
proteolytic degradation with production of Fab and Fc fragments
(53) and also renders the molecule flexible, thus
enhancing antigen binding. The human IgD molecule has three
constant-region domains. The amino acid sequence of a monoclonal IgD
was reported in 1982 (148), and the genomic sequence of
human
chain was reported in 1985 (167).
During storage, plasma proteases, especially plasmin, fragment the IgD
molecule; the cleavage is initiated near the carboxy terminus and later
in the inter-Fd-Fc area (54). The increased sensitivity to
"spontaneous" fragmentation is considered to be also due to the Fc
fragment, which is less compact for IgD than for other immunoglobulins
(55).
IgD does not induce passive cutaneous anaphylaxis in the guinea pig
(61, 118); does not bind to normal lymphocytes, neutrophils, or monocytes (80); and does not cross the placenta
(84). Aggregated monoclonal IgD consumed C3 to C9 without
loss of the early components of the complement cascade (63),
whereas native IgD has very little, if any, activating activity on the
components of the alternative pathway of complement (145).
IgD binds bacteria nonspecifically through the Fc fragment; for
example, it binds strongly to Neisseria catarrhalis and
Haemophilus influenzae and weakly to streptococcal groups A,
C, and G (48). IgD has antibody activity to specific antigens (34, 53, 60, 109, 110); individuals with high levels of IgD can produce specific IgD antibodies after antigenic challenge (62). Among 66 selected patients, 3 had IgD
antibodies to cow's milk (against bovine gamma globulin), 2 of them
had antibodies to bovine serum albumin, 1 had antibodies against
diphtheria toxoid, and all 4 also had antibodies of other classes and
had evidence of vigorous immunologic responsiveness (60).
Specific IgD antibodies were also described against thyroglobulin
(71), insulin in individuals with diabetes (34,
83), wheat in patients with celiac disease (6),
tartrazine in certain patients with chemical hypersensitivity (165), and hepatitis B core antigen (19).
In 1972, IgD was discovered on the surface of many B cells
(155); in humans and other species, IgD is the major antigen
receptor isotype on the surface of most peripheral B cells, where it is coexpressed with IgM. Few plasma cells that contain only IgD could be
found in lymphoid tissues (136); adenoids had greater
numbers of IgD-containing plasma cells than did human spleen, lymph
nodes, or intestinal lymphoid tissue (122, 136). There is
spontaneous synthesis and secretion of IgD from the tonsil lymphocytes
in culture (90). The heavy chains of IgD from the surface of
B cells are covalently linked by only one disulfide bridge, close to
the carboxy terminus. This allows a higher degree of freedom of the
antigen-binding sites than for the other immunoglobulin isotypes
(15). Serum IgD and membrane-bound IgD are antigenically similar, but they differ in susceptibility to proteolysis by plasmin. Also, the
chains from membrane-bound IgD have slightly slower electrophoretic mobility than serum monoclonal
chains in sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, suggesting a larger
molecular weight for the former (146).
The signals transduced by IgM or IgD receptors on B lymphocytes are the
same but with different kinetics. Signals transmitted through surface
IgD caused induction of up to 80 different somatic mutations
(95). The majority of the cell-bound IgDs are of the
type (140), while 90% of the monoclonal IgDs in serum are
of the
type. The so-called IgD paradox is the preferential
association between
heavy chains and
light chains in
IgD-secreting cells (91). This association is expressed in
vitro and in vivo, is a property of normal human IgD-secreting cells,
and is closely related to the secreted form of IgD. Explanations given
for the preferential association are that physical constraints favor
secretory
-
-chain association during intracellular chain
assembly, IgD immune response is highly restricted, and there is a high
degree of selectivity and unorthodox regulation of IgD light-chain
expression (91). Human neoplastic B cells that expressed
surface immunoglobulins of the
type frequently exported IgD,
whereas B cells that expressed immunoglobulins of the
type did not
export IgD (but inserted IgD into their surface membrane). This implies
that possession of a
chain facilitates the IgD secretory pathway.
IgD production is influenced by two major factors: an independent
mechanism (only for IgD), which may be genetically determined, and also
the same factors that control the production of the other immunoglobulin isotypes (94). The genes for the C region of µ and
(Cµ and
C
) are transcribed in the same RNA (a common
transcription unit) and can be expressed simultaneously. IgM and IgD
molecules present on individual B cells have identical V regions and
antigen-binding sites and are coexpressed by differential (alternate)
splicing of a common VDJ exon to either
Cµ or C
region exons
to produce separate µ and
RNAs. Allelic exclusion exists for IgD,
as for the other immunoglobulin classes (160). After the
antigen binds to the B-cell receptor, the secreted form of
chain is
shut off instead of being secreted in large amounts, as is the case
with IgM. The cells enter the pathways of plasma cells (which do not
have IgD except for IgD-secreting plasma cells, where the µ gene is
deleted) or of memory cells in secondary lymphoid organs, cells in
which IgD expression is lost (12, 111). Both IgD and IgM
receptors can transduce signals by the same mechanism; however, signals
mediated by engagement of surface IgD may differ from those mediated by
surface IgM
e.g., only the latter cause death of cells by apoptosis
(152).
After exposure to aggregated oligomeric or antigen-cross-linked
monomeric secreted IgD, 10 to 15% of human peripheral blood T cells
(T
cells) exhibit receptors for IgD and form rosettes with
IgD-coated erythrocytes (26, 27). These receptors are upregulated by interleukin-2 (IL-2), IL-4, and gamma interferon on the
T
cells. Both human CD4+ and CD8+ T cells
can express IgD receptors (28), which can ligate membrane IgD during antigen presentation by B cells to facilitate the responses of antigen-specific T and B cells (168).
With use of sensitive assays, IgD has been found in all of the
mammalian and avian species tested and is conserved across species
(89), which suggests an evolutionary advantage
(15). The role of IgD (especially the secreted form) is not
fully understood; it has even been thought sometime that IgD might have
no function (15). This was investigated in animals treated
with anti-IgD and, more recently, in IgD-deficient mice. In one model
of IgD knockout mice, there was only a slight decrease in the number of
B cells in the periphery and immunoglobulin isotypes were almost normal
(112). In another model, there was a delayed affinity maturation during T-cell-dependent antigen response (130);
hence, surface-bound IgD may serve as an accelerator of affinity
maturation in the primary B-cell response (125). In
IgM-deficient mice, B-cell development and maturation were normal and
IgD replaced membrane-bound and secretory IgM (99). It
appears that, with regard to B-cell development, IgD can largely
substitute for IgM in many respects; i.e., there is redundancy between
these two isotypes (99).
Serum IgD was considered an early marker of B-cell activation
(107). IgD can have a regulatory role, e.g., to enhance a
protective antibody response of the IgM, IgG, or IgA isotype, or to
interfere with viral replication (110). IgD can also
participate in the generation and maintenance of B-cell memory and
might have an important role in the transition from a stage of
susceptibility to induction of B-cell tolerance to one of
responsiveness (22, 142). Finally, IgD is a potent inducer
of tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-
), IL-1
, and IL-1 receptor
antagonist (38). IgD also induces release of IL-6, IL-10,
and leukemia inhibitory factor from peripheral blood mononuclear cells.
Monocytes seem to be the main producers of cytokines in vitro in the
presence of IgD (38).
 |
MEASUREMENT OF IGD |
The techniques used to measure IgD became more sensitive with
time, and this had a bearing on the detection of low levels of IgD,
e.g., in serum of children, as well as in other body fluids of adults.
With sensitive assays, e.g., radioimmunoassay (RIA) and enzyme
immunoassay (EIA), IgD was detected in the serum of all individuals
tested whereas with the less sensitive radial immunodiffusion (RID)
assay, IgD was not detected in some sera and in several other body fluids.
Among the techniques used to measure IgD, the first and still the most
commonly used method in clinical laboratories is RID. Commercial
reagents for measuring IgD by RID are readily available from several
companies (e.g., Beckman, Binding Site, and Behring). From an analysis
of the survey (proficiency testing) for serum IgD provided by the
College of American Pathologists, it appears that the so-called Mancini
RID assay ("endpoint") technique is now used much more often than
the "timed" (Fahey and McKelvey) method (24). The former
technique has a lower coefficient of variation (CV) than the latter. In
one study, RID had a sensitivity of 10 mg/liter (68) but a
significant number of individuals had undetectable amounts of serum IgD
when tested with this method. Others reported 3 mg/liter as the limit
of detection, but the precision for the range between 3 and 14 mg/liter
was poor (77). It is well known that gel techniques such as
RID are particularly affected by the variability in the molecular size
of the antigens because of alterations in the rate of diffusion through
the gel when the size is heterogeneous (166). Therefore, IgD
measurement by RID should be influenced by the high sensitivity of IgD
to proteolysis, which gives rise to faster-diffusing fragments of IgD
that retain their antigenic reactivity. This means that the concentration of IgD in old serum specimens would be overestimated by
RID, not underestimated as was recently claimed (40).
Inhibitors of proteolysis, e.g.,
-aminocaproic acid (final
concentration, 10 nM or 0.1%), aprotinin (1,000 kU/ml), or 0.01%
benzamidine should be added to serum to minimize the degradation of IgD
before measurement. Another disadvantage of RID is that the ring of
diffusion may pass across adjoining areas of the plate, depletes them
of antibodies, and gives incorrect results for other samples on the same plate (166). Surprisingly, specimens stored at 37°C
for either 6 or 12 months had lost 10% of their antigenic reactivity when assayed by RID (137). When stored at
20°C, the rate
of IgD degradation was so low as to be negligible for 10 to 20 years (137). However, it was claimed that, despite its
fragmentation, the IgD molecule could be quantitated by RID in blood
stains (for forensic purposes) even after several weeks
(72).
Nephelometry has also been used for IgD quantitation, but specific
reagents for IgD are not readily available. From experience gained with
quantitation of other serum proteins, it appears that the nephelometric
method is more precise, as well as more sensitive, than RID. The means
of CVs obtained after the measurement by nephelometry of several serum
proteins were significantly lower than the means obtained when RID was
used for measurement (126). The sensitivity of a
nephelometric assay for IgD was 3 mg/liter (11). Results obtained with laser nephelometry apparently were not influenced by the
molecular size of the protein assayed (159). Hence, the likely fragmentation of IgD during prolonged storage is not important for its quantitation by nephelometry. Discrepancies between the results
obtained for the same specimens by different investigators with either
RID or nephelometry occur when the unknown and standard samples differ
in molecular size or antigenic valence (52). It is
noteworthy that in a study of 12 analytes measured by RID, electroimmunodiffusion ("rocket assay"), rate nephelometry,
endpoint nephelometry, immunofluorometric assay, and EIA, no
method-associated bias was observed and the results were in close
agreement (126). In another experiment, a freshly drawn
sample of serum was divided into nine aliquots and each was subjected
to a different treatment (e.g., incubation at 37°C for up to 5 h
and exposure to up to 10 cycles of freezing and thawing). None of these
treatments significantly altered the concentration of IgD
(43).
RIA is 1,000-fold more sensitive than RID (150), and
sensitivities for IgD of 10 to 50 µg/liter were reported (43,
69). After modifications, the sensitivity could be extended to
0.0008 U/ml (43). When measured by RIA, IgD appears to be
stable during prolonged storage in frozen plasma; a frozen serum sample
assayed repeatedly over 2.5 years did not change in any consistent
manner (44). An RIA that used paper disks had a range of
measurable IgD concentrations of 2.5 to 250,000 µg/liter
(8), and the sensitivity of the assay was 10 µg/liter
(7). Another RIA, with the use of two antibodies, had CVs of
<8% within the assay and 12% between assays (45).
EIAs for measuring serum IgD were also reported (121).
Monoclonal anti-IgD antibodies were not as good as polyclonal
antibodies (gave a lower optical density); and the sensitivity of the
test was 4 µg/liter (121). A sandwich EIA that utilized
microtiter plates and affinity-purified goat anti-human IgD was used to
report results as optical densities at 405 nm without the need for
standards (169). Another EIA used avidin and biotin.
Antibody-coated plates could be stored at 4°C for up to 1 week
without loss of sensitivity, and the test showed linearity for serum
dilutions of 1/200 to 1/12,800. The CVs between and within assays were
<10% (123). EIA and RIA have also been used to measure
specific IgD (53, 93, 109). Other methods used for
quantitation of IgD were particle counting immunoassay (100)
and inhibition of hemagglutination (23).
As for other serum proteins, the standards (calibrators) are crucial to
accurate measurement of IgD (166). Although several reference materials are available for the three most abundant immunoglobulins (reviewed in reference 166), there
is a dearth of international reference preparations (IRP) for IgD.
International units have been allocated to several international
calibrants of proteins, and collaborative efforts were undertaken to
ascribe mass values to them. Some of these values were "far from the
truth" (166). An IRP with the declaration of a single
protein, IgD, lot 67/37 (1967), has 100 U per ampoule, and the weight
of lyophilized material is 81.88 mg (1-ml ampoule)
(10). This is, in fact, British Research Standard 67/37,
the most commonly used primary standard (World Health
Organization standard) for IgD. However, reference to the World Health
Organization standard is rarely reported and most studies have relied
on a secondary reference source. The commercially available reagents at
the present time are calibrated with a reference standard from
Kallestadt (now Beckman) or Behring. Differences between reference
preparations could be due to the freeze-drying procedure
(10), which increases the turbidity because of an alteration
in the low-density lipoprotein structure, which is best stabilized by a
high percentage of water. The use of an IgD-myeloma protein as a
reference protein reduces the reliability of the estimate
(137).
The weight of IgD corresponding to 1 U of activity was calculated to be
1.41 µg. The conversion factor from grams per liter to units per
milliliter was obtained with the use of RID (10). This value
provides only an approximate indication of the IgD content of a
research standard. It was said that a "true value" is not near to
being achieved by using grams per liter instead of units per milliliter
and that a "consensus value" (in grams per liter) invalidates the
general standardization (10). However, for many
investigators, there is poor acceptance of a change in the association
from grams per liter to the abstraction of units per milliliter
(10).
Manufacturers have to check the conversion factor from time to time and
correct the value if unstable proteins have changed their structure.
The change of a batch can cause the assignment of a new value for the
conversion factor (10). The former conversion factor
obtained by RID could no longer be confirmed, so that the IRP is not
suitable in some new immunoassays. Dunnette et al. (43)
found that three commercial companies had reference standards with
various ratios of mass units to units of activity (1.41, 0.77, and
0.83). Yet, when their RIA for IgD measurement was compared to the RID
kits from three companies, the values obtained with the two methods
were comparable, with a CV of <16%.
The College of American Pathologists, to my knowledge, is the only
organization that offers proficiency testing for serum IgD. However, of
more than 3,500 laboratories that usually participate in surveys by
this organization, a little more than 100 (range, >100 in 1982 to 6 in
1992) participated in the survey for IgD. According to Cheek and
Papadea (24), in 1995 only 35 laboratories participated in
this survey and all of the laboratories used RID to measure serum IgD.
I reviewed the results of the surveys for IgD from 1980 to the present
and noted that until 1989 the RID timed method was used by more
laboratories than the RID endpoint method. After 1989, the latter
method was more often used; reagents obtained from only one
manufacturer were used by most of the laboratories. Only one specimen
is sent to laboratories for the measurement of serum IgD, in contrast
to the two to four specimens sent for other determinations (e.g., for
IgG). The survey specimen was sent four times per year until 1993 and
thereafter only three times per year. The low number of laboratories
that participate in the survey for IgD precludes a meaningful
statistical analysis of the results. It has been noted, however, that
the CV for the results obtained by all participants in the survey for
IgD that used the RID timed method was mostly 20% or above while for
the endpoint method it was slightly lower.
Some investigators (39) implied that laboratories that
measure IgD in fewer than 20 specimens weekly do not have enough volume
to maintain testing proficiency. This seems not to be the case, since
the techniques for IgD measurement are not more difficult than similar
techniques routinely used in clinical laboratories to measure other
proteins. Also, it seems that only a very large reference laboratory,
if any, measures IgD in more than 20 specimens per week, since there is
not much need for this testing.
 |
IGD IN BLOOD AND OTHER BODY FLUIDS OF NORMAL
INDIVIDUALS |
There is no single method used universally for IgD measurement,
nor is there, to my knowledge, a preferred method recommended by a
professional organization or a scientific forum. Therefore, in this
section, values reported for IgD were obtained with the use of several
techniques. The reported concentrations of IgD in serum and other body
fluids depended on the techniques used for measurement when low levels
of IgD were present. For example, with the use of RID, IgD was found in
serum of children only after they had reached 12 months of age
(66) and was unmeasurable in cord blood (84). In
an older study, IgD was found by RID in only 2 of 83 cord blood samples
and in 4 of 90 newborn serum samples (86). However, with use
of an RIA, IgD was found in cord sera of 38 of 39 newborn infants.
There was no relationship between the concentrations of IgD in cord
blood and maternal serum, and although this suggests a fetal origin of
IgD, it does not reflect the synthesis of a specific antibody but
rather it may be a developmental phenomenon (23). In
newborns, the concentration of IgD in blood was about 0.08 mg/liter
(81).
The concentration of IgD in sera of infants and adults was age
dependent (94) and showed considerable biological variation, even in people of the same age, from undetectable to 400 mg/liter (43, 136). Some investigators found a linear increase of IgD until the age of 10 (66), followed by a gradual decrease
until the age of 14 (50). Others showed that age was not a
factor in IgD levels after 6 years of age (44); indeed,
there was no difference in serum IgD concentration from 19 to 59 years
of age (43). Another study also showed that the serum IgD
level of adults is attained in early childhood and persists throughout life (69). Levels of IgD were reported by some investigators to be stable in healthy adults over 1.5- and 3.5-year periods (136), but two- to threefold variations in the same
individuals were seen by others when the subjects were monitored for
weeks or months (81).
IgD has a remarkably wide normal range in serum, probably because of
striking differences in its rate of synthesis (131). A study
of 200 sera showed that the range was wider (4 logs) than for any other
immunoglobulin (150). The median concentration of serum IgD
was 30 mg/liter when determined by RID (135). The serum IgD
levels (measured by RIA) for 85 normal adults ranged between 0.2 and
121 mg/liter, with an arithmetic mean of 25 mg/liter (17.7 U/ml)
(45) and apparently had a trimodal distribution, with modes
at about 0.25, 5.1, and 35 U/ml (43). Others could not find
a trimodal distribution (69). Many reference intervals ("normal ranges") for IgD concentration in serum have been
reported, e.g., 14 to 85 mg/liter (144), 10 to 112 mg/liter
(21), and 5 to 240 mg/liter (97). Averages were
also scattered, e.g., 50 mg/liter (77), 40 mg/liter
(76), 35 mg/liter (97), and 25 mg/liter
(45). Since the values for serum IgD did not follow a
Gaussian distribution (43), it was common to transform the results into square roots (78) or a natural logarithmic
scale for statistical analysis (78, 114, 121).
Individuals can be high or low producers of (serum) IgD
(94). Early studies have suggested that about 10 to 14% of
individuals had very low concentrations of serum IgD, i.e., <3
mg/liter (43, 81) and that about 10% have high
concentrations (>100 mg/liter). It was hypothesized, but not proven
(94), that low producers can convert to high producers
because of infections and immune activation. Low serum IgD was not
dependent on age and was not related to sex (44). It has
also been suggested that the low IgD level is genetically determined,
with autosomal recessive inheritance (44). However, low
serum IgD was seen in 44% of children of parents with high IgD, making
autosomal inheritance unlikely (44). No inheritance pattern
was observed for high levels of IgD (44). Dunnette et al.
(43) proposed, on the basis of mathematical analysis
(Hardy-Weinberg equation), that levels of IgD in normal individuals are
strongly influenced by inheritance through a monogenic mechanism. Twin
studies also supported an influence of inheritance on the serum IgD
concentration (1, 81) but there are also environmental
influences (100). It was reported that Gm allotype
(163) and histocompatibility antigens (44, 49)
can influence IgD levels.
There was a positive correlation among serum IgD concentration, the
number of IgD-positive plasma cells in bone marrow (62), and
spontaneous in vitro IgD secretion by B lymphocytes (92). However, there was no correlation between the amount of IgD in serum
and the amount expressed by lymphocytes (69). A positive correlation was found between serum IgD level and serum IgA and IgE
levels (69), white blood cell count, and number of
CD4+ and CD25+ lymphocytes but not with other
immunoglobulin isotypes or markers of immune activation
(94). Although the amount of IgD usually paralleled the
amount of other immunoglobulins in serum (45), the values of
IgG and IgM did not always correlate with the presence or absence of
IgD, as detected by double-diffusion-in-gel assay (120).
It has been proposed that the female sex hormone influences IgD
synthesis (76), although values for serum IgD in males and females were similar in many studies (43, 44, 135). In
another study, females 1 through 5 years of age had higher serum IgD
concentrations than males (86). The concentration of IgD was
also elevated in pregnant women (76) and increased
throughout gestation (85), also suggesting that hormonal
factors influence IgD metabolism (76). A highly significant
exponential correlation was reported between maternal IgD levels and
gestational age (78). IgD was also elevated in maternal sera
at term, but the influence of labor (76, 85) and delivery
was not clear (58, 76, 85). Increased IgD levels in maternal
sera at term may represent antibodies directed to either leukocytes or
trophoblastic antigens (76). HLA-A2 and HLA-A13 in the
mother was correlated with IgD concentration at delivery
(78). Sera of women with premature delivery had a
significantly lower mean concentration of IgD than other groups (78). A correlation between parity and IgD level was also
reported (85).
IgD was not detected by RID in 10-fold-concentrated saliva, bile,
highly concentrated urine, concentrated tears, and unconcentrated cerebrospinal fluid (136). Isoelectric focusing of
unconcentrated cerebrospinal fluid showed oligoclonal and polyclonal
IgD patterns (102). Human colostrum (8) and milk
contain considerable quantities of IgD (43, 93); IgD was
found in all 11 specimens of milk tested, with an arithmetic mean of
1,150 U/liter, a geometric mean of 161 U/liter, and a median of 137 U/liter (range, 8 to 8,600 U/liter) (43). Values of IgD in
nasal washings ranged from 11 to 503 U/g of protein; the values were
higher than in saliva (123).
 |
SERUM IGD IN VARIOUS DISEASES AND CONDITIONS |
The meaning of an abnormal (increased or decreased) concentration
of serum IgD is not known. An increase in serum IgD does not imply the
generation of antibodies of the IgD class in each individual
(62).
IgD was measured in the sera of subjects with various conditions, and
although the values obtained probably depended somewhat on the
techniques used for measurement, the results from patients with various
diseases were compared to findings obtained by the same techniques from
healthy individuals, so the conclusions were valid. As just mentioned,
the most important factor for the accuracy of IgD measurement is the
standard used in the assays. The sensitivity of the techniques is less
important when testing various patients for increased or decreased
serum IgD values (in comparison to healthy subjects). A technique with
low sensitivity might not detect very low levels of IgD in some
patients, but this has no clinical importance. There have not been, to
my knowledge (nor were any expected), reports of increased sensitivity
of IgD to proteolytic enzymes in patients with certain diseases.
Although the storage of specimens for IgD quantitation is of some
importance when RID is used to measure IgD, this is not likely to
introduce bias in the values of IgD found in patients with various
diseases or conditions compared to healthy individuals if the storage
was similar for all specimens. Many individuals with high levels of one
or more immunoglobulin isotypes have low or normal levels of IgD, and
occasionally normal or high values for serum IgD were seen in
hypogammaglobulinemic patients (21, 136, 161). In a study of
58 patients with IgG paraproteinemia, of whom 34 had multiple myeloma,
a negative correlation for IgD was found (151), and in 133 patients with monoclonal gammopathies, IgD concentration decreased in
parallel with polyclonal immunoglobulin levels (46). Hiemstra et al. (62) studied 17 patients with high serum IgD levels (250 to 5,311 U/ml), both children and adults, and concluded that there was no apparent relationship between several clinical syndromes and the increased serum IgD. In many studies of patients with
various diseases, only serum IgD levels were reported whereas in some
patients with certain diseases or conditions (e.g., atopy) the amounts
of other immunoglobulins were reported as well. Because this minireview
is focused on IgD, the serum levels of other immunoglobulins measured
in conjunction with IgD are not given.
Infections.
IgD antibody seemed to behave like IgM antibody at
the early stage of infection (149). There was a significant
positive correlation between the levels of IgD and the titers of
complement-fixing antibody to Mycobacterium pneumoniae
(149). Specific IgD antibodies were also found in patients
with rubella (139), and IgD antibodies to measles virus were
found in patients with subacute sclerosing panencephalitis
(96). IgD antibodies to diphtheria toxin, Escherichia coli, and streptolysin O were also reported (60, 67, 143, 147). A 22-year-old female with presumed coxsackievirus
myocarditis had an increased serum IgD level (4).
Chronic infections were also considered to raise the concentrations of
serum IgD (136); indeed, serum IgD was increased in patients
with leprosy (144), tuberculosis (20, 74),
salmonellosis, infectious hepatitis (133), and malaria
(29). In a 7-year-old child with a history of recurrent
infections, a high level of IgD was noted in serum (125).
Many, but not all, patients with elevated IgD (measured by RID) had
recurrent staphylococcal infections (21), and increased
values of serum IgD were found in some patients with viral infections
(132, 139). The clinical relevance of all of these specific
IgD antibodies, if any, is not known.
Immunodeficiencies.
Patients with immunodeficiencies very
often have various infections; hence, it is unclear whether IgD
concentrations in these patients reflect immunodeficiency itself or
infections. There is no uniform pattern of IgD production in defined
primary immunodeficiencies; some individuals had increased levels, and
some had decreased levels (94). Within the whole group of
immunodeficiencies, a positive correlation of IgD with IgA and IgE was
noted. A positive correlation of serum IgA and IgD levels was also
found in human immunodeficiency virus-infected patients
(108). With an RID assay, IgD was detected in serum in only
49% of IgA-deficient patients (21) and numerous
IgD-producing plasma cells were found in the lacrimal and parotid
glands, suggesting that secretory IgD plays a compensatory role in IgA
deficiency (17). Some patients with hyper-IgE syndrome, who
often have recurrent infections with staphylococcus, had high serum IgD
levels, but the cause for this is not known (69). Low levels
of IgD in the hyper-IgE syndrome were also reported (42).
Group mean concentrations of IgD in plasma were depressed in patients
with Wiscott-Aldrich syndrome (21). In three children with
agammaglobulinemia (no B cells in the blood), the serum IgD level was
higher than in healthy children (21). IgD was increased in
plasma of patients with Nezelof syndrome (21) and in
children with ataxia telangiectasia (105). A high serum IgD
value was found in a girl with immunodeficiency and increased
serum IgM (9). Serum IgD was increased in patients with impaired cell-mediated immunity, e.g., those with allergic bronchopulmonary aspergillosis (97) and sarcoidosis
(20), as well as in patients with AIDS (25, 107, 108,
120). Recently, it was shown in 131 children with many types of
immunodeficiencies (including CD40 ligand [CD 145] deficiency) that
the serum IgD level was not of particular value in the investigation of
immunodeficient children; the serum IgD level was not associated with
the general picture of immune activation (94).
Autoimmune and allergic diseases.
Serum IgD was increased in
patients with autoimmune diseases who also had increased IgG, IgA, and
IgM (83, 87, 116, 133, 141). High values of serum IgD were
found in some, but not all, adults with rheumatoid arthritis
(136) and in children with juvenile rheumatoid arthritis
(51). Antinuclear antibodies of the IgD class were found in
patients with systemic lupus erythematosus (53, 98, 128,
164), and a slight increase of serum IgD was found in patients
with Sjögren's syndrome and in a patient with autoimmune
thyroiditis (71). Autoantibodies of the IgD class were found
in some patients with scleroderma (98) and atopic diseases
(74, 77, 97, 169), e.g., atopic dermatitis (18, 69). IgD was reported to be increased or decreased in sera of patients with allergic asthma (74, 77, 97), but a
considerable overlap existed between healthy and allergic subjects. In
the atopic group, the mean serum IgD level did not differ significantly on the basis of age, sex, or asthmatic status (121). In
patients with asthma, basophil degranulation by a high anti-IgD
concentration was reported (121).
IgD against birch and timothy pollen allergens was increased in sera of
atopics with IgE antibodies to birch pollen allergens, compared to sera
of atopics without IgE against these allergens. The allergen
specificity of IgD antibodies was confirmed with an allergen inhibition
test. However, no significant correlation was found between total serum
IgD and IgE (169). IgD antibodies specific for a
benzylpenicilloyl epitope were found in some patients with penicillin
allergy (53), and IgD was also found on red cells from
patients with hemolytic anemia caused by penicillin (88),
but the clinical value of these antibodies is doubtful.
Other conditions.
The geometric mean of the IgD concentrations
in sera of cigarette smokers was twice as high as in nonsmokers. In the
smoking group, it was the highest in those who did not actively inhale smoke (fourfold higher than in nonsmokers) and the lowest in heavy smokers who inhaled (8). The IgD level was more strongly
related to the number of cigarettes smoked per day than to the years of smoking. Cessation of smoking was followed by normalization of the IgD
level (8). The influence of maternal smoking was more evident in newborns of nonallergic parents; even paternal smoking increased the level of cord serum IgD in these newborns
(100). The reason for the increased IgD in smokers is not
known; it could be because of infections. B cells may be stimulated by
mild to moderate degrees of smoking but suppressed by heavy smoking
(8), and it is likely that the influence of substances in
tobacco smoke is not directly on B cells but on regulatory T cells.
A definite increase in serum IgD was found in patients with Hodgkin's
disease several months after splenectomy (31). A correlation with the histologic type was observed; e.g., patients in the
lymphocyte-depleted group had extremely high levels of IgD (log mean,
284 mg/liter). Also, patients who received treatment had significantly
lower values than untreated patients (30, 31) and there was
a definite tendency toward lower levels in older patients
(31). A fall in serum IgD was seen after radiotherapy but
not after chemotherapy in patients with lymphoma (2). When
RID was used to measure IgD, the values fell in stages III and IV; IgD
was not detectable in 30% of patients with lymphoma (but also in 39%
of healthy controls) (2).
Increased concentrations of serum IgD were found in other diseases and
conditions, e.g., in children with kwashiorkor (136), (transiently) after allogeneic bone marrow transplantation
(107); very rarely in patients with Behçet syndrome;
and in those with idiopathic retinal vasculitis (79). In
this latter condition, a linear correlation was found between serum IgD
levels and the percentage of IgD-positive B cells in the blood
(79). The geometric mean of IgD concentrations in the sera
of nine children with Henöch-Schoenlein purpura was significantly
higher than that in sera of control children (16.7 versus 9.1 mg/liter); increased IgD levels were found only in children who did not
have nephritis (140). The geometric mean of serum IgD values
was significantly higher in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary
disease than in healthy individuals (106). However, the
distribution of IgD in each group showed marked positive skewedness
(114). High values of serum IgD were also found in children
following chemotherapy for malignancies (5) and in some
patients with hyperparathyroidism (120). In some patients
with central nervous system tumors, increased serum IgD levels, as well
as oligoclonal bands of IgD in spinal fluid (103), suggested
that systemic IgD production in these patients occurred independently
of IgG (104). High IgD values (compared to those of healthy
individuals) were reported in the sera of four patients with aortitis
(116) and in a few patients with liver cirrhosis
(116).
Monoclonal IgD.
The measurement of serum IgD is most important
for the monitoring (and the diagnosis) of IgD gammopathies (IgD myeloma
and
heavy-chain disease). IgD myeloma represented 1.8%
(154) and 1.2% (65) of multiple myelomas in two
series. It has an aggressive course, often with extramedullary
involvement, amyloidosis, lymphadenopathy, splenomegaly, severe anemia,
azotemia, very often (
90%) Bence Jones proteinuria (14,
47), and short survival (82). M components (with
-,
-, or
2-globulin mobility), representing monoclonal IgD, were seen in only 60% of the serum protein electrophoreses of
patients with IgD myeloma (14); the remaining patients had normal electrophoresis or hypogammaglobulinemia (14, 47). The range of monoclonal IgD concentrations in serum was 800 to 66,000 mg/liter (65). From 60% (14) to 90%
(65) of IgD myelomas are of the
type. The rarity of IgD
secretion was explained by a block in the assembly, glycosylation,
and secretion of this immunoglobulin or rapid intracellular catabolism
of IgD
destined for secretion (70). There is antigenic
heterogeneity among monoclonal IgDs (probably allotypic variants, not
subclasses, of IgD) (115, 129). A patient with IgD myeloma
had separate heavy- and light-chain M components in the serum, probably
because of an intracellular assembly defect (158). A
monoclonal IgD had antibody activity against triglycerides, and the
patient had hyperlipidemia (127). Another monoclonal IgD
had pyroglobulin activity (precipitated irreversibly at 56°C)
(153). Finally, an increased serum viscosity of 6.8 U
(reference, <1.8 U) was reported for a monoclonal IgD (117). Only three patients with monoclonal IgD of
undetermined significance were reported (13, 75, 113). The
only patient with
heavy-chain disease reported so far was a
70-year-old male who presented with symptoms of multiple myeloma and
died with kidney complications (157).
HIDS.
The new syndrome HIDS (MIM 260920) (so named in 1995)
was described in 1984 by Van der Meer et al. (156) and seems
to have boosted the measurement of serum IgD in various patients in the hope of detecting more patients with HIDS and also of finding increased
IgD in other conditions. In 1983, Prieur and Griscelli described eight
patients with juvenile onset of periodic fever and joint disease who
were later shown to have increased serum IgD, as seen in HIDS
(124). Originally described in patients from Holland, HIDS
was found mostly in European countries (32) and later also
in the United States (56). HIDS was found in patients with
periodic fever that resembles familial Mediterranean fever (MIM 249100)
and chronic, infantile, neurological, cutaneous, and articular
syndrome. To my knowledge, 144 cases have been recorded in the
international registry by the end of 1999. This syndrome is
characterized by recurrent febrile attacks accompanied by abdominal pain, arthralgia, headache, and skin lesions. In the first reported cases of HIDS, IgD was measured by RID in specimens of serum to which
-aminocaproic acid was added to inhibit proteolysis. Skin manifestations occurred in 80% of patients with HIDS but did not correlate with the serum IgD levels (57). During the febrile episodes, all patients had serum IgD values above 60 mg/liter (35) or 100 U/ml measured, if possible, on two occasions at least 1 month apart (36). Between attacks, IgD was as low as 11, 15.1, and 39 U/liter in three patients but rose to 656, 1,743, and
600 U/liter, respectively, during attacks (36). In two
patients, the clinical symptoms of HIDS preceded the rise in serum IgD, indicating that elevated IgD concentration is not the cause of the
clinical symptoms in this syndrome (59).
HIDS is probably inherited as an autosomal recessive trait
(33). Very recently, mutations in the mevalonate kinase gene were shown to cause HIDS (41, 64). It has been proposed that patients exhibit an uncontrolled type III hypersensitivity reaction, possibly with involvement of IgD-containing complexes (16). Complement deficiencies or decreases in serum C3 and C4 were not found,
albeit circulating immune complexes were detected in 20% of patients
during or between attacks (36). A linear correlation was
observed between serum IgD level and serum IgD complexes
(62). During the febrile episodes, inflammatory cytokines,
e.g., IL-6, TNF-
, and gamma interferon, were increased together with
naturally occurring inhibitors such as IL-1 receptor antagonist and
soluble TNF receptor (37). It was suggested that the
underlying disturbances in HIDS may be in the T-cell regulation
resulting in abnormal production of IgD primarily of the
type, as
well as of IgA, IgM, and IgG3 (59).
IgD was also increased (>100 U/ml) in many children with periodic
fever, aphthous stomatitis, pharyngitis, and adenopathy syndrome
(119), which was described in 1987 by Marshall et al. (101). This syndrome differs from HIDS and is self-limited
(HIDS can persist throughout life) and responds dramatically to a
single oral dose of corticosteroids (119).
 |
CONCLUDING REMARKS |
Although considerably more is known now about IgD than several
decades ago soon after it was discovered, most of the recent information pertains to membrane-bound, not to serum, IgD. Recently, renewed interest in serum IgD measurement came from the chance discovery that some children with periodic fever had increased levels
of serum IgD during the attacks (156). Increased serum IgD
was found in many conditions but not always with consistency and has no
practical value. A decreased level of serum IgD also has no clinical
value. Serum IgD measurement can be important for monitoring of IgD
myelomas, and it has been recently restated that monoclonal
immunoglobulins are more accurately quantitated by measuring the
protein concentration of the M spike in serum protein electrophoresis
than by measuring the specific monoclonal immunoglobulin
(73). The former procedure could be more difficult to
perform for IgD because it migrates faster than IgG in serum protein
electrophoresis, often together with other beta globulins, and
sometimes the homogeneous IgD band is faint (154). The
increased sensitivity of IgD to proteolysis could give false elevated
levels when IgD is measured by RID in specimens that were not properly stored and to which protease inhibitors were not added. Expression of
results in international units versus mass units (milligrams per liter)
remains debatable, especially since no new IRP of IgD is available. To
measure serum IgD in many patients only for the purpose of retaining
competency (39) is unwarranted because measurement of IgD is
not technically different from or more demanding than other routine
measurements, and no clinical value of a finding of increased or
decreased serum IgD has been shown. The possibility of finding a
disease or another syndrome always associated with high serum IgD is
very remote and likely of no clinical relevance. From experience, it
seems that a specific role for serum IgD will not be found in the near
future. In the present climate of cost containment in clinical
laboratories, it is not justifiable to continue routinely measuring IgD
every time other immunoglobulins (e.g., IgG, IgA, and IgM) are
quantitated, or even separately, except in the cases of patients with
monoclonal IgD in the serum or patients suspected of having HIDS.
 |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
I thank R. Tomar, H. Spiegelberg, and D. Rappette for helpful
information and J. Teitz for preparing the manuscript.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
*
Mailing address: Department of Pathology,
Immunopathology Laboratory, Kaleida Health/Buffalo General Hospital,
100 High St., Buffalo, NY 14203. Phone: (716) 859-2509. Fax: (716)
859-2393. E-mail: vladutiu{at}acsu.buffalo.edu.
 |
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