| Literature DB >> 30402618 |
Abstract
. Animal dander is an important source of respiratory allergens, and sensitization to allergens from cat and/or dog during childhood represents a risk factor for the development of asthma and rhinitis later in life. The identification and characterization of allergenic components is crucial to improve diagnosis and therapy in patients with allergy to pets. Allergens from furry animals belong to a restricted number of protein families, a large majority are lipocalins or albumins, some are secretoglobins or latherins. Animal dander contains cross-reactive molecules and current efforts aim at defining species-specific allergens that have a high diagnostic sensitivity. Component-resolved diagnosis allows to discriminate genuine sensitization from cross-sensitization. This review contains a detailed description of allergenic components of cat, dog, horse, and small mammalian pets. Sensitizations to exotic pets, a newly emerging issue, are also discussed.Entities:
Keywords: allergy to pets; animal allergens; cat; component-resolved diagnosis ; dog; exotic pets; furry animals; guinea pig; hamster; rabbit
Year: 2017 PMID: 30402618 PMCID: PMC6040002 DOI: 10.5414/ALX01842E
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Allergol Select ISSN: 2512-8957
Animal dander allergens that have been recognized by WHO/IUIS Allergen Nomenclature Sub-Committee (www.allergen.org).
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| Cat ( | ||||
| Fel d 1 [ | 18 | > 90 | Species-specific | Secretoglobin |
| Fel d 2 [ | 69 | 14 – 30 | Marker for cross-sensitization to other mammalian albumins, responsible for cat-pork syndrome [ | Serum albumin |
| Fel d 3 [ | 11 | 10 | nd | Cystatin |
| Fel d 4 [ | 22 | 63 | Cross-reactive with Can f 6 and Equ c 1; partially cross-reactive with Can f 2 [ | Lipocalin |
| Fel d 5 [ | 28, 64 | 38 | Cross-reactive with Fel d 6 | Immunoglobulin A |
| Fel d 6 [ | 28, 94 | nd | Cross-reactive with Fel d 5 | Immunoglobulin M |
| Fel d 7 [ | 18 | 37 | Probably cross-reactive with Can f 1 | Lipocalin |
| Fel d 8 [ | 24 | 19 | nd | Latherin |
| Dog ( | ||||
| Can f 1 [ | 18 – 25 | 49 – 75 | Probably cross-reactive with Fel d 7, partially cross-reactive with Can f 2 and human tear lipocalin (TL) with unknown clinical relevance [ | Lipocalin |
| Can f 2 [ | 19 | 10 – 40 | Partially cross-reactivity with Can f 1, and Fel d 4 [ | Lipocalin |
| Can f 3 [ | 69 | 16 – 30 | Cross-reactive with albumins from other mammals [ | Serum albumin |
| Can f 4 [ | 16 – 18 | 35 | Cross-reactive with Bos d 23k [ | Lipocalin |
| Can f 5 [ | 28 | 70 | Cross-reactive with human prostate-specific antigen (PSA) [ | Kallikrein |
| Can f 6 [ | 27 – 29 | 38 – 61 | Cross-reactive with Fel d 4, Equ c 1 [ | Lipocalin |
| Horse ( | ||||
| Equ c 1 [ | 22 – 25 | 42 – 76 | Cross-reactive with Fel d 4, Can f 6, and Mus m 1 [ | Lipocalin |
| Equ c 2 [ | 16 | nd | nd | Lipocalin |
| Equ c 3 [ | 65 – 67 | 18 | Cross-reactive with albumins from other mammals | Serum albumin |
| Equ c 4 [ | 17 | 77 | nd | Latherin |
| Rabbit ( | ||||
| Ory c 1 [ | 17 – 18 | nd | nd | Lipocalin |
| Ory c 2 [ | 21 | nd | nd | Lipocalin |
| Ory c 3 [ | 19 – 21 | 77 | Species-specific | Secretoglobin |
| Ory c 4 [ | 24 | 46 | Probably cross-reactive with Fel d 4, Can f 6, and Equ c 1 | Lipocalin |
| Guinea pig ( | ||||
| Cav p 1 [ | 20 | 70 | nd | Lipocalin |
| Cav p 2 [ | 17 | 65 | Species-specific | Lipocalin |
| Cav p 3 [ | 18 | 54 | Species-specific | Lipocalin |
| Cav p 4 [ | 66 | 52 | Cross-reactive with albumins from other mammals | Serum albumin |
| Cav p 6 | 18 | nd | Probably cross-reactive with Fel d 4, Can f 6, and Equ c 1 | Lipocalin |
| Golden hamster ( | ||||
| Mes a 1 [ | 20.5, 24 | nd | Probably cross-reactive with European hamster | Lipocalin |
MW = molecular weight; nd = not determined; *name used in publications, but not officially recognized.