Literature DB >> 11842303

Molecular, structural, and immunologic relationships between different families of recombinant calcium-binding pollen allergens.

Raffaella Tinghino1, Anna Twardosz, Bianca Barletta, Eleonora M r Puggioni, Patrizia Iacovacci, Cinzia Butteroni, Claudia Afferni, Adriano Mari, Brigitte Hayek, Gabriella Di Felice, Margarete Focke, Kerstin Westritschnig, Rudolf Valenta, Carlo Pini.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Calcium-binding plant allergens can be grouped in different families according to the number of calcium-binding domains (EF hands).
OBJECTIVE: We sought to identify pollens containing crossreactive calcium-binding allergens and to investigate structural and immunologic similarities of members belonging to different families of calcium-binding allergens.
METHODS: By means of multiple sequence alignment and molecular modeling, we searched for structural similarities among pollen allergens with 2 (Phl p 7, timothy grass; Aln g 4, alder), 3 (Bet v 3, birch) and 4 EF hands (Jun o 4, prickly juniper). Purified recombinant Aln g 4 and Jun o 4 were used to determine the prevalence of IgE recognition in 210 patients sensitized to different pollens and to search, by means of ELISA competition, for the presence of cross-reactive epitopes in pollens from 16 unrelated plant species. IgE cross-reactivity among the allergen families was studied with purified rPhl p 7, rAln g 4, rBet v 3, and rJun o 4 and 2 synthetic peptides comprising the N-terminal and C-terminal EF hands of Phl p 7 by means of ELISA competition.
RESULTS: Structural similarities were found by using molecular modeling among the allergens with 2, 3, and 4 EF hands. Pollens from 16 unrelated plants contained Aln g 4- and Jun o 4-related epitopes. Twenty-two percent of the patients with multiple pollen sensitization reacted to at least one of the calcium-binding allergens. A hierarchy of IgE cross-reactivity (rPhl p7 > rAln g 4 > rJun o 4 > rBet v 3) could be established that identified rPhl p 7 as the EF-hand allergen containing most IgE epitopes in the population studied.
CONCLUSION: The demonstration that members of different families of calcium-binding plant allergens share similarities suggests that it may be possible to use representative molecules for the diagnosis and therapy of allergies to EF-hand allergens.

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Year:  2002        PMID: 11842303     DOI: 10.1067/mai.2002.121528

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Allergy Clin Immunol        ISSN: 0091-6749            Impact factor:   10.793


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