Previously, the specificity of human immune responses to Dactylis pollen was analyzed in 26 plasma samples with high levels of grass-pollen-specific IgG4 ('IgG4+ plasma', largely from grass-pollen-allergic patients), as compared to 25 plasma samples with low grass-pollen-specific IgG4 ('normal plasma', from nonatopic individuals). In the present study, a quantification of the Dactylis-pollen-specific IgE, IgM, IgA class and IgG subclass antibodies in these plasma samples is proposed. Isotypic distribution in IgG4+ plasma was 68% IgG [IgG2 (38%) > IgG4 (30%) > IgG1 (19%) > IgG3 (13%)], 27% IgM, 4% IgA and 0.05% IgE. In normal plasma it was 73% IgM, 20% IgG [IgG3 (38%) > IgG2 (33%) > IgG1 (29%) > IgG4 (0%)], 6% IgA and 0.006% IgE. In IgG4+ plasma, specific IgE, IgG1, IgG2 and IgG4 concentrations were positively correlated between each other. Finally, the present study clearly confirmed the possible role of the CH gene regulation in allergic diseases.