Peanuts (Arachis hypogaea) contain some of the most potent food allergens. In recent years an increasing prevalence of peanut allergies both in children and adults has been observed in the USA and in Europe. In vitro identification and characterization of allergens including those from peanut have been frequently performed by Western blotting. However this method may alter the immunoglobulin E (IgE) antibody reactivity since the proteins are denatured by detergent treatment and/or reduction of disulfide bonds by reducing reagents and does not answer the question how peanut allergens interact with the human digestive apparatus and immune system. Size exclusion chromatography of peanut extract shows that approximately 90% of the total protein content is eluted as one peak in the exclusion volume with a molecular mass of over 200 kDa. The proteins of this fraction were analyzed by blue-native polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (PAGE), immunoblotting, two-dimensional PAGE and Western blotting. A complex of Ara h 1 (Acc. no. P43237), Ara h 3/4 (AAM46958), Ara h 3 (AAC63045), Ara h 4 (AF086821), Gly 1 (AAG01363) and iso-Ara h 3 (AAT39430) was identified using patients’ IgE and allergen-specific monoclonal antibodies; N-terminal sequencing and matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionisation-time of flight analysis verified these findings. A comparison of the peanut allergen sequences of Ara h 3/4, Ara h 3, Ara h 4 and peanut trypsin inhibitor (AF487543) and the proteins Gly 1 and iso-Ara h 3, not yet described as allergens, leads to the conclusion that these proteins are isoallergens of each other. It was shown that these isoallergens are posttranslationally cleaved and held together by disulfide bonds in accordance to the 11S plant seed storage proteins signature.

Analysis of the composition of an IgE-reactive high molecular weight protein complex of peanut extract containing Ara h 1 and Ara h 3/4.

Conti A;
2005

Abstract

Peanuts (Arachis hypogaea) contain some of the most potent food allergens. In recent years an increasing prevalence of peanut allergies both in children and adults has been observed in the USA and in Europe. In vitro identification and characterization of allergens including those from peanut have been frequently performed by Western blotting. However this method may alter the immunoglobulin E (IgE) antibody reactivity since the proteins are denatured by detergent treatment and/or reduction of disulfide bonds by reducing reagents and does not answer the question how peanut allergens interact with the human digestive apparatus and immune system. Size exclusion chromatography of peanut extract shows that approximately 90% of the total protein content is eluted as one peak in the exclusion volume with a molecular mass of over 200 kDa. The proteins of this fraction were analyzed by blue-native polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (PAGE), immunoblotting, two-dimensional PAGE and Western blotting. A complex of Ara h 1 (Acc. no. P43237), Ara h 3/4 (AAM46958), Ara h 3 (AAC63045), Ara h 4 (AF086821), Gly 1 (AAG01363) and iso-Ara h 3 (AAT39430) was identified using patients’ IgE and allergen-specific monoclonal antibodies; N-terminal sequencing and matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionisation-time of flight analysis verified these findings. A comparison of the peanut allergen sequences of Ara h 3/4, Ara h 3, Ara h 4 and peanut trypsin inhibitor (AF487543) and the proteins Gly 1 and iso-Ara h 3, not yet described as allergens, leads to the conclusion that these proteins are isoallergens of each other. It was shown that these isoallergens are posttranslationally cleaved and held together by disulfide bonds in accordance to the 11S plant seed storage proteins signature.
2005
Istituto di Scienze delle Produzioni Alimentari - ISPA
Ara h 3/4 /
Food allergy
Gly 1
Peanut
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14243/77621
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