| Literature DB >> 25531161 |
Merima Bublin1, Heimo Breiteneder.
Abstract
Peanut allergy is an IgE-mediated, persisting immune disorder that is of major concern worldwide. Currently, no routine immunotherapy is available to treat this often severe and sometimes fatal food allergy. Traditional subcutaneous allergen immunotherapy with crude peanut extracts has proven not feasible due to the high risk of severe systemic side effects. The allergen-specific approaches under preclinical and clinical investigation comprise subcutaneous, oral, sublingual and epicutaneous immunotherapy with whole-peanut extracts as well as applications of hypoallergenic peanut allergens or T cell epitope peptides. Allergen-nonspecific approaches include monoclonal anti-IgE antibodies, TCM herbal formulations and Toll-like receptor 9-based immunotherapy. The potential of genetically engineered plants with reduced allergen levels is being explored as well as the beneficial influence of lactic acid bacteria and soybean isoflavones on peanut allergen-induced symptoms. Although the underlying mechanisms still need to be elucidated, several of these strategies hold great promise. It can be estimated that individual strategies or a combination thereof will result in a successful immunotherapy regime for peanut-allergic individuals within the next decade.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 25531161 PMCID: PMC5548240 DOI: 10.1159/000369340
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int Arch Allergy Immunol ISSN: 1018-2438 Impact factor: 2.749
Allergen-specific immunotherapy approaches for peanut allergy
| Approach | Study subjects and inclusion criteria | Immunizing reagent | Effects | Publication |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Subcutaneous immunotherapy | Human adults including those with anaphylaxis | Peanut extract | ↑ oral tolerance and | 1997 [ |
| OIT | Children with no history of severe anaphylaxis | Peanut flour | 54–84% desensitized to target maintenance doses; | 2011 [ |
| SLIT | Children [ | Liquid peanut extract | ↑ oral tolerance; mild side effects; | 2011 [ |
| EPIT | Children with no history of severe anaphylaxis | Patch containing 100 μg of peanut proteins | ↑ oral tolerance in up to 67% mild side effects; | 2014 [ |
| Recombinant hypoallergenic peanut allergens and bacterial adjuvants | Human adults with no history of severe anaphylaxis | mAra h 1–3 plus heat/phenol-inactivated | ↓ SPT; | 2013 [ |
| Recombinant hypoallergenic peanut allergens | Murine model of peanut anaphylaxis | mAra h 2 | Reduced clinical symptom scores and histamine release | 2001 [ |
| RBL-2H3 cells and PBMCs from 4 peanut-allergic patients | mAra h 2 | Partially reduced IgE reactivity with retained T cell reactivity | 2005 [ | |
| Peanut extract and bacterial adjuvants | Brown Norway rat model for peanut allergy | Peanut extract plus | Downregulation of peanut allergic response in 2 of 8 rats | 2008 [ |
| Balb/c mice | Peanut extract, cholera toxin and CpG | Prevention of oral sensitization by previous subcutaneous administration of the mix | 2007 [ | |
| Peanut-allergic C3H/HeJ mice | Modified Ara h 1–3 plus HKLM | Reduced histamine levels, peanut-specific IgE, bronchial constriction and anaphylaxis symptoms | 2003 [ | |
| Peanut-allergic C3H/HeJ mice | HKE-mAra h 1–3 | Reduced production of IL-4, IL-5 and IL-13 by splenocytes and long-term downregulation of peanut hypersensitivity | 2003 [ | |
| T cell epitope-based peptide vaccines | Peanut-allergic C3H/HeJ mice | 30 overlapping Ara h 2 20-mers | Reduced histamine release and anaphylaxis symptoms | 2007 [ |
| DNA-based vaccines | AKR/J mice | Complex of chitosan and Ara h 2-encoding DNA | Reduction of peanut-induced anaphylaxis, reduced level of IgE | 1999 [ |
| AKR/J, Balb/c and C3H/HeJ mice | Plasmid DNA encoding Ara h 2 | Strain-dependent induction of allergic sensitization | 1999 [ | |
| Hypoallergenic transgenic plants | Western blot with sera from peanut-allergic patients | Seed proteins from transgenic peanut plants with silenced Ara h 2 and Ara h 6 | Significant reduction of IgE-binding | 2008 [ |
Allergen-nonspecific immunotherapy approaches for peanut allergy
| Approach | Study subjects | Active substance | Effects | Publication (year) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Anti-IgE immunotherapy | Human adults | TNX-901 | ↑ oral tolerance in up to 24%; | [ |
| Human adults | Omalizumab | ↑ oral tolerance; | [ | |
| Cytokine immunotherapy | C3H/HeJ mice | Liposome-encapsulated recombinant IL-12 | Protection against peanut anaphylaxis; | [ |
| AKR/J mice | Recombinant IL-12 or IL-21-expression plasmid | Protection against peanut anaphylaxis; | [ | |
| TLR9-based immunotherapy | TLR-9-deficient mice | Peanut proteins | Resistance to peanut-induced anaphylaxis; | [ |
| TCM herbal therapy | C3H/HeJ mice | FAHF-1 | Protection against peanut anaphylaxis; | [ |
| C3H/HeJ mice | FAHF-2 | Protection from anaphylaxis lasting up to 36 weeks after treatment; | [ | |
| Human adults | FAHF-2 | Well-tolerated; | [ | |
| Soybean isoflavones | C3H/HeJ mice | Dietary isoflavones genistein and daidzein | ↓ anaphylactic symptoms and mast cell degranulation | [ |