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Modification of peanut allergen Ara h 3: effects on IgE binding and T cell stimulation. | LitMetric

Modification of peanut allergen Ara h 3: effects on IgE binding and T cell stimulation.

Int Arch Allergy Immunol

Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Arkansas Children's Hospital Research Institute, University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences, Little Rock, AR 72202, USA.

Published: May 2002

AI Article Synopsis

  • Peanut allergy is a serious health issue and the study focuses on modifying a peanut allergen, Ara h 3, to reduce its IgE-binding capabilities, which are critical for allergic reactions.
  • Specific mutations were introduced in the Ara h 3 cDNA to create modified proteins, and these were tested using various immunological assays to assess their impact on peanut allergy indicators.
  • Results showed that the modified Ara h 3 required more protein to compete with the wild-type for IgE binding, demonstrating significantly reduced binding (35-85%), while still effectively stimulating T-cell responses, indicating its potential for allergen immunotherapy.

Article Abstract

Background: Peanut allergy is a major health concern due to the increased prevalence, potential severity, and chronicity of the reaction. The cDNA encoding a third peanut allergen, Ara h 3, has been previously cloned and characterized. Mutational analysis of the Ara h 3 IgE-binding epitopes with synthetic peptides revealed that single amino acid changes at critical residues could diminish IgE binding.

Methods: Specific oligonucleotides were used in polymerase chain reactions to modify the cDNA encoding Ara h 3 at critical IgE binding sites. Four point mutations were introduced into the Ara h 3 cDNA at codons encoding critical amino acids in epitopes 1, 2, 3 and 4. Recombinant modified proteins were used in SDS-PAGE/Western IgE immunoblot, SDS-PAGE/Western IgE immunoblot inhibition and T cell proliferation assays to determine the effects of these changes on in vitro clinical indicators of peanut hypersensitivity.

Results: Higher amounts of modified Ara h 3 were required to compete with the wild-type allergen for peanut-specific serum IgE. Immunoblot analysis with individual serum IgE from Ara-h-3-allergic patients showed that IgE binding to the modified protein decreased approximately 35-85% in comparison to IgE binding to wild-type Ara h 3. Also, the modified Ara h 3 retained the ability to stimulate T cell activation in PBMCs donated by Ara-h-3-allergic patients.

Conclusions: The engineered hypoallergenic Ara h 3 variant displays two characteristics essential for recombinant allergen immunotherapy; it has a reduced binding capacity for serum IgE from peanut-hypersensitive patients and it can stimulate T-cell proliferation and activation.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1159/000057999DOI Listing

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