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Pectin methylesterases of pollen tissue, a major allergen in olive tree
Author(s) -
Salamanca Guillermo,
Rodríguez Rosalía,
Quiralte Joaquín,
Moreno Carmen,
Pascual Cristina Y.,
Barber Domingo,
Villalba Mayte
Publication year - 2010
Publication title -
the febs journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.981
H-Index - 204
eISSN - 1742-4658
pISSN - 1742-464X
DOI - 10.1111/j.1742-4658.2010.07689.x
Subject(s) - olea , allergen , pollen , biology , pichia pastoris , edman degradation , molecular mass , antiserum , polyclonal antibodies , complementary dna , biochemistry , botany , allergy , recombinant dna , peptide sequence , enzyme , antigen , immunology , gene
Olive tree ( Olea europaea ) pollen is a main cause of allergy in Mediterranean areas and North America. A novel allergen, Ole e 11, has been detected by proteomic techniques. Protein bands binding IgE from allergic sera were excised from a 2D electrophoresis gel and analysed by Edman degradation and MALDI‐TOF MS. Four peptides were sequenced and used for designing primers to clone the cDNA codifying the protein. Ole e 11 consists of a 342 amino acid length polypeptide with a molecular mass of 37.4 kDa and a pI of 7.8. The allergen was identified as a pectin methylesterase and showed low identity with other members of this family from foods such as those from carrot (23%), orange (25%) and tomato (24%), and higher identity with those from Arabidopsis thaliana (57%) and Salsola kali (54%) pollen. The protein was overproduced in Pichia pastoris , purified, and characterized as an active enzyme. CD analysis rendered 3%α‐helix, 50%β‐sheet and 27%β‐turns for its secondary structure, which is in agreement with other pectin methylesterase structures. The recombinant protein was demonstrated to be immunologically equivalent to the natural form by immunoblotting, indirect ELISA and inhibition experiments, using polyclonal antiserum and sera from olive pollen allergic patients. The prevalence fluctuated between 55.9% and 75.6% in three different allergic populations. The availability of this new olive pollen allergen could improve the component‐resolved diagnosis. Its allergenic relevance is stepped up by the biotechnological use of these enzymes to improve organoleptic properties in processing foods and further confirms the need to include it in an accurate diagnosis.

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