Literature DB >> 33584660

IgE-Mediated Peanut Allergy: Current and Novel Predictive Biomarkers for Clinical Phenotypes Using Multi-Omics Approaches.

Rebecca Czolk1,2, Julia Klueber1,3, Martin Sørensen4,5, Paul Wilmes6, Françoise Codreanu-Morel7, Per Stahl Skov3,8,9, Christiane Hilger1, Carsten Bindslev-Jensen3, Markus Ollert1,3, Annette Kuehn1.   

Abstract

Food allergy is a collective term for several immune-mediated responses to food. IgE-mediated food allergy is the best-known subtype. The patients present with a marked diversity of clinical profiles including symptomatic manifestations, threshold reactivity and reaction kinetics. In-vitro predictors of these clinical phenotypes are evasive and considered as knowledge gaps in food allergy diagnosis and risk management. Peanut allergy is a relevant disease model where pioneer discoveries were made in diagnosis, immunotherapy and prevention. This review provides an overview on the immune basis for phenotype variations in peanut-allergic individuals, in the light of future patient stratification along emerging omic-areas. Beyond specific IgE-signatures and basophil reactivity profiles with established correlation to clinical outcome, allergenomics, mass spectrometric resolution of peripheral allergen tracing, might be a fundamental approach to understand disease pathophysiology underlying biomarker discovery. Deep immune phenotyping is thought to reveal differential cell responses but also, gene expression and gene methylation profiles (eg, peanut severity genes) are promising areas for biomarker research. Finally, the study of microbiome-host interactions with a focus on the immune system modulation might hold the key to understand tissue-specific responses and symptoms. The immune mechanism underlying acute food-allergic events remains elusive until today. Deciphering this immunological response shall enable to identify novel biomarker for stratification of patients into reaction endotypes. The availability of powerful multi-omics technologies, together with integrated data analysis, network-based approaches and unbiased machine learning holds out the prospect of providing clinically useful biomarkers or biomarker signatures being predictive for reaction phenotypes.
Copyright © 2021 Czolk, Klueber, Sørensen, Wilmes, Codreanu-Morel, Skov, Hilger, Bindslev-Jensen, Ollert and Kuehn.

Entities:  

Keywords:  endotypes; food allergy; peanut allergy; phenotypes; predictive biomarker

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2021        PMID: 33584660      PMCID: PMC7876438          DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2020.594350

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Front Immunol        ISSN: 1664-3224            Impact factor:   7.561


  131 in total

1.  Peanut digestome: Identification of digestion resistant IgE binding peptides.

Authors:  Luigia Di Stasio; Gianluca Picariello; Mariantonietta Mongiello; Rita Nocerino; Roberto Berni Canani; Simona Bavaro; Linda Monaci; Pasquale Ferranti; Gianfranco Mamone
Journal:  Food Chem Toxicol       Date:  2017-06-17       Impact factor: 6.023

2.  Single-cell profiling of peanut-responsive T cells in patients with peanut allergy reveals heterogeneous effector TH2 subsets.

Authors:  David Chiang; Xintong Chen; Stacie M Jones; Robert A Wood; Scott H Sicherer; A Wesley Burks; Donald Y M Leung; Charuta Agashe; Alexander Grishin; Peter Dawson; Wendy F Davidson; Leah Newman; Robert Sebra; Miriam Merad; Hugh A Sampson; Bojan Losic; M Cecilia Berin
Journal:  J Allergy Clin Immunol       Date:  2018-01-31       Impact factor: 10.793

3.  Characterization of lymphocyte responses to peanuts in normal children, peanut-allergic children, and allergic children who acquired tolerance to peanuts.

Authors:  Victor Turcanu; Soheila J Maleki; Gideon Lack
Journal:  J Clin Invest       Date:  2003-04       Impact factor: 14.808

4.  House dust mite (Der p 10) and crustacean allergic patients may react to food containing Yellow mealworm proteins.

Authors:  Kitty C M Verhoeckx; Sarah van Broekhoven; Constance F den Hartog-Jager; Marco Gaspari; Govardus A H de Jong; Harry J Wichers; Els van Hoffen; Geert F Houben; André C Knulst
Journal:  Food Chem Toxicol       Date:  2014-01-09       Impact factor: 6.023

5.  Anaphylactic Reactions to Novel Foods: Case Report of a Child With Severe Crocodile Meat Allergy.

Authors:  Natalia Ballardini; Anna Nopp; Carl Hamsten; Mirja Vetander; Erik Melén; Caroline Nilsson; Markus Ollert; Carsten Flohr; Annette Kuehn; Marianne van Hage
Journal:  Pediatrics       Date:  2017-03-08       Impact factor: 7.124

6.  Ara h 8, a Bet v 1-homologous allergen from peanut, is a major allergen in patients with combined birch pollen and peanut allergy.

Authors:  Diana Mittag; Jaap Akkerdaas; Barbara K Ballmer-Weber; Lothar Vogel; Marjolein Wensing; Wolf-Meinhard Becker; Stef J Koppelman; André C Knulst; Arthur Helbling; Susan L Hefle; Ronald Van Ree; Stefan Vieths
Journal:  J Allergy Clin Immunol       Date:  2004-12       Impact factor: 10.793

7.  Peanut epitopes for IgE and IgG4 in peanut-sensitized children in relation to severity of peanut allergy.

Authors:  Annebeth E Flinterman; Edward F Knol; Doerthe A Lencer; Ludmilla Bardina; Constance F den Hartog Jager; Jing Lin; Suzanne G M A Pasmans; Carla A F M Bruijnzeel-Koomen; Hugh A Sampson; Els van Hoffen; Wayne G Shreffler
Journal:  J Allergy Clin Immunol       Date:  2008-01-30       Impact factor: 10.793

8.  EAACI Molecular Allergology User's Guide.

Authors:  P M Matricardi; J Kleine-Tebbe; H J Hoffmann; R Valenta; C Hilger; S Hofmaier; R C Aalberse; I Agache; R Asero; B Ballmer-Weber; D Barber; K Beyer; T Biedermann; M B Bilò; S Blank; B Bohle; P P Bosshard; H Breiteneder; H A Brough; L Caraballo; J C Caubet; R Crameri; J M Davies; N Douladiris; M Ebisawa; P A EIgenmann; M Fernandez-Rivas; F Ferreira; G Gadermaier; M Glatz; R G Hamilton; T Hawranek; P Hellings; K Hoffmann-Sommergruber; T Jakob; U Jappe; M Jutel; S D Kamath; E F Knol; P Korosec; A Kuehn; G Lack; A L Lopata; M Mäkelä; M Morisset; V Niederberger; A H Nowak-Węgrzyn; N G Papadopoulos; E A Pastorello; G Pauli; T Platts-Mills; D Posa; L K Poulsen; M Raulf; J Sastre; E Scala; J M Schmid; P Schmid-Grendelmeier; M van Hage; R van Ree; S Vieths; R Weber; M Wickman; A Muraro; M Ollert
Journal:  Pediatr Allergy Immunol       Date:  2016-05       Impact factor: 6.377

9.  Prospective investigation on the transfer of Ara h 2, the most potent peanut allergen, in human breast milk.

Authors:  Frauke Schocker; Joseph Baumert; Skadi Kull; Arnd Petersen; Wolf-Meinhard Becker; Uta Jappe
Journal:  Pediatr Allergy Immunol       Date:  2016-06       Impact factor: 6.377

10.  Microbiota therapy acts via a regulatory T cell MyD88/RORγt pathway to suppress food allergy.

Authors:  Azza Abdel-Gadir; Emmanuel Stephen-Victor; Georg K Gerber; Magali Noval Rivas; Sen Wang; Hani Harb; Leighanne Wang; Ning Li; Elena Crestani; Sara Spielman; William Secor; Heather Biehl; Nicholas DiBenedetto; Xiaoxi Dong; Dale T Umetsu; Lynn Bry; Rima Rachid; Talal A Chatila
Journal:  Nat Med       Date:  2019-06-24       Impact factor: 53.440

View more
  2 in total

Review 1.  Alternatives to Cow's Milk-Based Infant Formulas in the Prevention and Management of Cow's Milk Allergy.

Authors:  Natalia Zofia Maryniak; Ana Isabel Sancho; Egon Bech Hansen; Katrine Lindholm Bøgh
Journal:  Foods       Date:  2022-03-23

2.  Interpreting success or failure of peanut oral immunotherapy.

Authors:  Shijie Cao; Cathryn R Nagler
Journal:  J Clin Invest       Date:  2022-01-18       Impact factor: 14.808

  2 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.