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Biochemical, Biophysical and IgE-Epitope Characterization of the Wheat Food Allergen, Tri a 37

Wheat is an important staple food and potent allergen source. Recently, we isolated a cDNA coding for wheat alpha-purothionin which is recognized by wheat food allergic patients at risk for severe wheat-induced allergy. The purpose of the present study was the biochemical, biophysical and IgE epitop...

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Autores principales: Pahr, Sandra, Selb, Regina, Weber, Milena, Focke-Tejkl, Margarete, Hofer, Gerhard, Dordić, Andela, Keller, Walter, Papadopoulos, Nikolaos G., Giavi, Stavroula, Mäkelä, Mika, Pelkonen, Anna, Niederberger, Verena, Vrtala, Susanne, Valenta, Rudolf
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4219751/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25368998
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0111483
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author Pahr, Sandra
Selb, Regina
Weber, Milena
Focke-Tejkl, Margarete
Hofer, Gerhard
Dordić, Andela
Keller, Walter
Papadopoulos, Nikolaos G.
Giavi, Stavroula
Mäkelä, Mika
Pelkonen, Anna
Niederberger, Verena
Vrtala, Susanne
Valenta, Rudolf
author_facet Pahr, Sandra
Selb, Regina
Weber, Milena
Focke-Tejkl, Margarete
Hofer, Gerhard
Dordić, Andela
Keller, Walter
Papadopoulos, Nikolaos G.
Giavi, Stavroula
Mäkelä, Mika
Pelkonen, Anna
Niederberger, Verena
Vrtala, Susanne
Valenta, Rudolf
author_sort Pahr, Sandra
collection PubMed
description Wheat is an important staple food and potent allergen source. Recently, we isolated a cDNA coding for wheat alpha-purothionin which is recognized by wheat food allergic patients at risk for severe wheat-induced allergy. The purpose of the present study was the biochemical, biophysical and IgE epitope characterization of recombinant alpha-purothionin. Synthetic genes coding for alpha-purothionin were expressed in a prokaryotic system using Escherichia coli and in a eukaryotic expression system based on baculovirus-infected Sf9-insect cells. Recombinant proteins were purified and characterized by SDS-PAGE, mass spectrometry, circular dichroism, chemical cross-linking and size exclusion chromatography. Five overlapping peptid were synthesized for epitope mapping. Alpha-purothionin-specific rabbit antibodies were raised to perform IgE-inhibition experiments and to study the resistance to digestion. The IgE reactivity of the proteins and peptides from ten wheat food allergic patients was studied in non-denaturing RAST-based binding assays. Alpha-purothionin was expressed in the prokaryotic (EcTri a 37) and in the eukaryotic system (BvTri a 37) as a soluble and monomeric protein. However, circular dichroism analysis revealed that EcTri a 37 was unfolded whereas BvTri a 37 was a folded protein. Both proteins showed comparable IgE-reactivity and the epitope mapping revealed the presence of sequential IgE epitopes in the N-terminal basic thionin domain (peptide1:KSCCRSTLGRNCYNLCRARGAQKLCAGVCR) and in the C-terminal acidic extension domain (peptide3:KGFPKLALESNSDEPDTIEYCNLGCRSSVC, peptide4:CNLGCRSSVCDYMVNAAADDEEMKLYVEN). Natural Tri a 37 was digested under gastric conditions but resistant to duodenal digestion. Immunization with EcTri a 37 induced IgG antibodies which recognized similar epitopes as IgE antibodies from allergic patients and inhibited allergic patients' IgE binding. Reactivity to Tri a 37 does not require a folded protein and the presence of sequential IgE epitopes indicates that sensitization to alpha-purothionin occurs via the gut. Both allergens can be used for in-vitro diagnosis of wheat food allergy. The induction of blocking IgG antibodies suggests the usefulness for immunotherapy.
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spelling pubmed-42197512014-11-12 Biochemical, Biophysical and IgE-Epitope Characterization of the Wheat Food Allergen, Tri a 37 Pahr, Sandra Selb, Regina Weber, Milena Focke-Tejkl, Margarete Hofer, Gerhard Dordić, Andela Keller, Walter Papadopoulos, Nikolaos G. Giavi, Stavroula Mäkelä, Mika Pelkonen, Anna Niederberger, Verena Vrtala, Susanne Valenta, Rudolf PLoS One Research Article Wheat is an important staple food and potent allergen source. Recently, we isolated a cDNA coding for wheat alpha-purothionin which is recognized by wheat food allergic patients at risk for severe wheat-induced allergy. The purpose of the present study was the biochemical, biophysical and IgE epitope characterization of recombinant alpha-purothionin. Synthetic genes coding for alpha-purothionin were expressed in a prokaryotic system using Escherichia coli and in a eukaryotic expression system based on baculovirus-infected Sf9-insect cells. Recombinant proteins were purified and characterized by SDS-PAGE, mass spectrometry, circular dichroism, chemical cross-linking and size exclusion chromatography. Five overlapping peptid were synthesized for epitope mapping. Alpha-purothionin-specific rabbit antibodies were raised to perform IgE-inhibition experiments and to study the resistance to digestion. The IgE reactivity of the proteins and peptides from ten wheat food allergic patients was studied in non-denaturing RAST-based binding assays. Alpha-purothionin was expressed in the prokaryotic (EcTri a 37) and in the eukaryotic system (BvTri a 37) as a soluble and monomeric protein. However, circular dichroism analysis revealed that EcTri a 37 was unfolded whereas BvTri a 37 was a folded protein. Both proteins showed comparable IgE-reactivity and the epitope mapping revealed the presence of sequential IgE epitopes in the N-terminal basic thionin domain (peptide1:KSCCRSTLGRNCYNLCRARGAQKLCAGVCR) and in the C-terminal acidic extension domain (peptide3:KGFPKLALESNSDEPDTIEYCNLGCRSSVC, peptide4:CNLGCRSSVCDYMVNAAADDEEMKLYVEN). Natural Tri a 37 was digested under gastric conditions but resistant to duodenal digestion. Immunization with EcTri a 37 induced IgG antibodies which recognized similar epitopes as IgE antibodies from allergic patients and inhibited allergic patients' IgE binding. Reactivity to Tri a 37 does not require a folded protein and the presence of sequential IgE epitopes indicates that sensitization to alpha-purothionin occurs via the gut. Both allergens can be used for in-vitro diagnosis of wheat food allergy. The induction of blocking IgG antibodies suggests the usefulness for immunotherapy. Public Library of Science 2014-11-04 /pmc/articles/PMC4219751/ /pubmed/25368998 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0111483 Text en © 2014 Pahr et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Pahr, Sandra
Selb, Regina
Weber, Milena
Focke-Tejkl, Margarete
Hofer, Gerhard
Dordić, Andela
Keller, Walter
Papadopoulos, Nikolaos G.
Giavi, Stavroula
Mäkelä, Mika
Pelkonen, Anna
Niederberger, Verena
Vrtala, Susanne
Valenta, Rudolf
Biochemical, Biophysical and IgE-Epitope Characterization of the Wheat Food Allergen, Tri a 37
title Biochemical, Biophysical and IgE-Epitope Characterization of the Wheat Food Allergen, Tri a 37
title_full Biochemical, Biophysical and IgE-Epitope Characterization of the Wheat Food Allergen, Tri a 37
title_fullStr Biochemical, Biophysical and IgE-Epitope Characterization of the Wheat Food Allergen, Tri a 37
title_full_unstemmed Biochemical, Biophysical and IgE-Epitope Characterization of the Wheat Food Allergen, Tri a 37
title_short Biochemical, Biophysical and IgE-Epitope Characterization of the Wheat Food Allergen, Tri a 37
title_sort biochemical, biophysical and ige-epitope characterization of the wheat food allergen, tri a 37
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4219751/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25368998
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0111483
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