Background: Aedes aegypti and Dermatophagoides pteronyssinus contain important allergens including cross-reactive tropomyosins. However, the functional and clinical relevance of their cross-reactivity is still debated.
Objective: To analyse the humoral and cellular cross-reactivity of recombinant Aed a 10.01, Aed a 10.02 and Der p 10.
Methods: Sera from 15 Austrian house dust mite-allergic, Der p 10-sensitized individuals were tested for IgE reactivity to recombinant tropomyosins in ELISA, inhibition ELISA and basophil activation tests. BALB/c mice were immunized with Aed a 10.01 or Aed a 10.02, and their sera were assessed for reactivity to all tropomyosins. Splenocytes were stimulated with all tropomyosins and synthetic peptides representing the amino acid sequence of Aed a 10.01.
Results: IgE antibodies of Der p 10-sensitized patients cross-reacted with both tropomyosins from A. aegypti. Aed a 10.01 was a more potent inhibitor of IgE binding to Der p 10 and a stronger activator of basophils sensitized with Der p 10-specific IgE than Aed a 10.02. Murine antibodies raised against Aed a 10.01 and Aed a 10.02 cross-reacted with Der p 10. Aed a 10.01-specific antibody showed stronger cross-reactivity with Der p 10 than Aed a 10.02-specific antibody. Splenocytes from both groups of mice proliferated similarly to all tropomyosins. Five cross-reactive T cell-activating regions were identified.
Conclusion And Clinical Relevance: Tropomyosins from D. pteronyssinus and A. aegypti show humoral and cellular cross-reactivity, involving 5 potential T cell-activating regions. The more pronounced cross-reactivity of Aed a 10.01 and Der p 10 matched the higher sequence similarity of both proteins.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/cea.13229 | DOI Listing |
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