| Literature DB >> 33761048 |
Rod A Herman1, Zhenglin Hou2, Henry Mirsky2, Mark E Nelson2, Carey A Mathesius2, Jason M Roper3.
Abstract
Newly expressed proteins in genetically engineered crops are evaluated for potential cross reactivity to known allergens as part of their safety assessment. This assessment uses a weight-of-evidence approach. Two key components of this allergenicity assessment include any history of safe human exposure to the protein and/or the source organism from which it was originally derived, and bioinformatic analysis identifying amino acid sequence relatedness to known allergens. Phosphomannose-isomerase (PMI) has been expressed in commercialized genetically engineered (GE) crops as a selectable marker since 2010 with no known reports of allergy, which supports a history of safe exposure, and GE events expressing the PMI protein have been approved globally based on expert safety analysis. Bioinformatic analyses identified an eight-amino-acid contiguous match between PMI and a frog parvalbumin allergen (CAC83047.1). While short amino acid matches have been shown to be a poor predictor of allergen cross reactivity, most regulatory bodies require such matches be assessed in support of the allergenicity risk assessment. Here, this match is shown to be of negligible risk of conferring cross reactivity with known allergens.Entities:
Keywords: Allergy; Bioinformatics; PMI; Phosphomannose-isomerase; Safety; Selectable marker
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33761048 PMCID: PMC8026442 DOI: 10.1007/s11248-021-00243-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Transgenic Res ISSN: 0962-8819 Impact factor: 2.788
Fig. 1Amino acid alignment between PMI in DP-915635–4, CAC83047.1, and Gad m 1. Bolded amino acids are shared by two or more of the sequences. Yellow designates alignment between PMI and frog (CAC83047.1) and/or fish (Gad m 1) sequence. Purple designates alignment between frog and fish sequences but not PMI. Solid underline designates 8-mer alignment between PMI and frog sequence. Dotted underline designates IgE epitopes in fish sequence from Sánchez et al. (2016). (Color figure online)
Fig. 2Three-dimensional structural comparison of PMI and fish parvalbumin. In the cartoon representation, cylindrical spiral ribbons stand for α-helices, arrows for β-strands, and linking ropes for loops. The left panel is a PMI model built with Swiss-Model (https://swissmodel.expasy.org/) based on PDB:5zuy. The model has good quality scores, GMQE:0.95 and QMEAN:0.53, due to its high sequence identity (86.2%) with the template. The two β-barrel domains are labeled as double-stranded β-helix (DSBH). The eight-amino-acid alignment is depicted as sticks-and-balls. The right panel shows a fish parvalbumin structure PDB:2mbx with three EF-hand or helix-loop-helix motifs, αA—αB, αC—αD, and αE—αF. The αC—αD and αE—αF structures containing bound Ca2+. The three IgE binding epitopes are highlighted in red on αA, magenta on αB, and blue on αD. The eight-amino-acid alignment is shown as sticks on αE. (Color figure online)