Cloning, Expression, and Mapping of Allergenic Determinants of αS1-Casein, a Major Cow’s Milk Allergen
Author(s) -
Ulrike Schulmeister,
Heidrun Hochwallner,
Ines Swoboda,
Margarete FockeTejkl,
Beate Geller,
Mats Nystrand,
Annika Härlin,
Josef Thalhamer,
Sandra Scheiblhofer,
Walter Keller,
B. Niggemann,
Santiago Quirce,
Christoph Ebner,
Adriano Mari,
Gabrielle Pauli,
Udo Herz,
Rudolf Valenta,
Susanne Spitzauer
Publication year - 2009
Publication title -
the journal of immunology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.737
H-Index - 372
eISSN - 1550-6606
pISSN - 0022-1767
DOI - 10.4049/jimmunol.0712366
Subject(s) - immunoglobulin e , casein , milk allergy , allergen , basophil , recombinant dna , allergy , basophil activation , food allergy , immunology , chemistry , biology , antibody , biochemistry , gene
Milk is one of the first components introduced into human diet. It also represents one of the first allergen sources, which induces IgE-mediated allergies in childhood ranging from gastrointestinal, skin, and respiratory manifestations to severe life-threatening manifestations, such as anaphylaxis. Here we isolated a cDNA coding for a major cow's milk allergen, alphaS1-casein, from a bovine mammary gland cDNA library with allergic patients' IgE Abs. Recombinant alphaS1-casein was expressed in Escherichia coli, purified, and characterized by circular dichroism as a folded protein. IgE epitopes of alphaS1-casein were determined with recombinant fragments and synthetic peptides spanning the alphaS1-casein sequence using microarrayed components and sera from 66 cow's milk-sensitized patients. The allergenic activity of ralphaS1-casein and the alphaS1-casein-derived peptides was determined using rat basophil leukemia cells transfected with human FcepsilonRI, which had been loaded with the patients' serum IgE. Our results demonstrate that ralphaS1-casein as well as alphaS1-casein-derived peptides exhibit IgE reactivity, but mainly the intact ralphaS1-casein induced strong basophil degranulation. These results suggest that primarily intact alphaS1-casein or larger IgE-reactive portions thereof are responsible for IgE-mediated symptoms of food allergy. Recombinant alphaS1-casein as well as alphaS1-casein-derived peptides may be used in clinical studies to further explore pathomechanisms of food allergy as well as for the development of new diagnostic and therapeutic strategies for milk allergy.
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