| Literature DB >> 35221696 |
Jun-Da Li1,2,3, Le Cui1,2,3, Ying-Yang Xu1,2,3, Kai Guan1,2,3.
Abstract
PURPOSE: Royal jelly and honeycomb are commonly consumed in China, and anaphylaxis caused by ingestion of royal jelly is rare. To date, there is no report of anaphylaxis after ingestion of royal jelly in China. Its cross-reactivity with honeycomb is still unclear. CASE REPORT: A 56-year-old Chinese female experienced two episodes of anaphylaxis within 1 hour after ingestion of royal jelly within one month. After avoiding royal jelly and other bee products, no anaphylactic reaction occurred again. The skin prick test and basophil activation test showed positive reactivity to royal jelly and honeycomb. In immunoblotting and immunoblotting inhibition tests, a 60 kDa protein was recognized in royal jelly and cross-reactivity with honeycomb. The mass spectrometry data revealed that the 62kDa protein belongs to major royal jelly protein 3.Entities:
Keywords: anaphylaxis; honeycomb; major royal jelly protein 3; royal jelly
Year: 2021 PMID: 35221696 PMCID: PMC8866983 DOI: 10.2147/JAA.S346045
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Asthma Allergy ISSN: 1178-6965
Figure 1The results of basophil activation test.
Figure 2Immunoblot and inhibition analysis. The serum-specific IgE bind to royal jelly and honeycomb. Line 1: royal jelly, serum; Line 2: royal jelly, serum co-incubated with honeycomb; Line 3: honeycomb, serum; Line 4: honeycomb, serum co-incubated with royal jelly.