Concomitant administration of cyclosporin A (CsA) with Ag has been shown to augment the production of Ag-specific IgE in vivo. We demonstrate that addition of CsA also markedly potentiated Ag-specific IgE in vitro. Low doses of CsA (3 and 10 ng/ml) added at the time of culture initiation selectively enhanced Ag-specific IgE but not IgA or IgG1 production, whereas higher doses (30 ng/ml) suppressed production of all the isotypes. Augmented IgE production was found to correlate with enhanced production of IL-4 and diminished production of IFN-gamma. Delayed addition (after 2 days) of low doses of CsA to Ag-stimulated cultures did not potentiate IgE production, even though CsA differentially affected levels of IL-4 and IFN-gamma. CsA enhanced Ag-mediated cognate T/B interaction was not affected by neutralizing doses of anti-IL-4, suggesting Ag-mediated lymphocytic "synapses" may be inaccessible to anti-IL-4. The effect of CsA on Ag presentation was determined by pulsing peritoneal exudate cells, spleen cells, or primed B cells with Ag and low doses of CsA before incubation with primed splenocytes. Enhanced Ag-specific IgE responses were detected with no effect on IL-4 or IFN-gamma levels. Thus, our study indicates that CsA potentiation of Ag-specific IgE response is due to cumulative action of CsA on two independent pathways: first, CsA differentially modulates IL-4 and IFN-gamma levels during the early phase of cognate Th2/B cell interaction; and second, CsA directly affects APC and IgE isotype-specific amplifying cellular components without apparently affecting the secretory levels of IL-4 and IFN-gamma. Dual mechanisms of CsA-potentiated IgE production are consistent with the hypothesis of two-tiered T cell regulation of Ag-specific IgE responses.