| Literature DB >> 33275648 |
Wolfgang Hemmer1, Felix Wantke1.
Abstract
The bites of blood-feeding insects regularly induce sensitization to salivary proteins and cause local hypersensitivity reactions in over 90% of the population, representing either an IgE-mediated immediate wheal and flare reaction or a T cell-driven delayed papule. Long-lasting large local reactions and bullous reactions may cause significant discomfort and reduction in quality-of-life. Anaphylaxis is rarely reported though proven for several insects, above all mosquitoes, horse flies, and kissing bugs. Recently, salivary gland proteins have been thoroughly studied in some blood-feeding insect species, and several allergens have been identified. Interestingly, many of them belong to the same protein families as the well-known honeybee and wasp venom allergens (phospholipases, hyaluronidases, antigens 5, serine proteases) though sequence identities are mostly low. There is still insufficient evidence for the proposed cross-reactivity between salivary proteins from blood-feeding insects and Hymenoptera venom allergens. © Dustri-Verlag Dr. K. Feistle.Entities:
Keywords: biting midges; black flies; blood-feeding insects; horse flies; mosquito allergy; mosquitoes; salivary allergens
Year: 2020 PMID: 33275648 PMCID: PMC7709451 DOI: 10.5414/ALX02123E
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Allergol Select ISSN: 2512-8957
Figure 1.Skin reactions after bites by hematophagous insects. a, b: Immediate wheal and flare reaction during a bite provocation with a mosquito, “double” wheal after interruption of blood feeding; c: Type 4 late reactions (indurated papules) after multiple mosquito bites in an infant; d, e, f: Large local reactions after mosquito bites; g: Pearl-like arranged skin lesions caused by fleas bites; h: Bacterial superinfections due to scratching after multiple mosquito bites; i, j: Bullous skin reactions caused by flea bites after 3 (i) and 5 (j) days; k: Massive bullous bite reaction after a suspected black fly bite.
Stage theory of the progression of cutaneous hypersensitivity reactions to bites from hematophagous insects.
| Stage | Immediate reaction | Delayed reaction |
|---|---|---|
| 1 (naive) | – | – |
| 2 | – | + |
| 3 | + | + |
| 4 | + | – |
| 5 (tolerance) | – | – |
Blood-feeding insects causing allergic reactions.
| Scientific name | English name | Important genera | c, s |
|---|---|---|---|
| Diptera (flies and midges) | |||
| Nematocera (midges) | |||
| Culicidae | mosquitoes |
| c, s |
| Simuliidae | black flies |
| c, s? |
| Ceratopogonidae | biting midges |
| c |
| Phlebotomidae | sand flies |
| c |
| Brachycera (flies) | |||
| Tabanidae | horse flies, deer flies |
| c, s |
| Glossinidae | tsetse flies |
| c, s |
| Muscidae | house/stable flies |
| c |
| Hippoboscidae | louse flies, keds |
| c, s |
| Siphonaptera (fleas) | |||
| Pulicidae | fleas |
| c |
| Heteroptera (bugs) | |||
| Reduviidae | kissing bugs |
| c, s |
| Cimicidae | bed bugs |
| c |
c: cutaneous reactions; s: systemic reactions.
Figure 2.Central European blood-feeding insects. a: Culex pipiens (Culicidae, mosquitoes), b: Aedes vexans (Culicidae, mosquitoes), c: Simulium spp. (Simuliidae, black flies), d: Culicoides spp. (Ceratopogonidae, biting midges), e: Haematopota pluvialis, Common horse fly, cleg fly (Tabanidae, horse flies), f: Tabanus bromius, band-eyed brown horse fly (Tabanidae, horse flies). Photos a, b, c, e, f: W. Hemmer, d: https://www.scienceimage.csiro.au/image/11052.
Occurrence of proteins/allergens with homology to known Hymenoptera venom allergens in blood-feeding insects.
| Antigen 5-like | Hyaluroni-dase | PLA1 | PLA2 | Serine protease | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Honeybee | – | Api m 2 | – | Api m 1 | Api m 7 |
| Wasps | Ves v 5 | Ves v 2 | Ves v 1 | – | Pol d 4 |
| Mosquitoes | + | + | + | + | + |
| Black flies | ++ | + | |||
| Biting midges | ++ | ++ | ++ | ||
| Sand flies | + | + | |||
| Horse flies | ++ | ++ | |||
| Tsetse flies | ++ | ||||
| Fleas | ++ | + | |||
| Kissing bugs | + | + |
+ = detected as protein; ++ = identified as allergen; PLA = phospholipase A.