C.L. Densmore
Department of Biomedical Sciences and Pathobiology, Virginia-Maryland
Regional College of Veterinary Medicine, Virginia Tech, Blacksburg, VA
Through its complexity, the immune system of vertebrates often acts as a
"double-edged sword". While providing crucial self-protection against foreign antigens
through specific or non-specific immunity, the immune system may also become self-destructive via
the mechanisms of immune-mediated hypersensitivity. Four general classes of immunological
hypersensitivity have been well described in higher vertebrates. By comparison, relatively little
detail is known of immunological hypersensitivity and its associated pathology among the piscine
classes. Type I and Type IV hypersensitivities, involving immediate anaphylactic and delayed-type,
cell mediated reactions respectively, have been described in a variety of piscine species. Type
III, or immune complex mediated, hypersensitivity has also been described in fish as a pathogenic
factor in glomerulonephritis. Type II hypersensitivity involving humoral targeting of host tissues
is presumably also structurally and functionally feasible among fish species, although there is a
sparsity of literature to lend support to its occurrence.