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Identification of amino acids critical for IgE-binding to sequential epitopes of bovine kappa-casein and the similarity of these epitopes to the corresponding human kappa-casein sequence.

Authors :
Han N
Järvinen KM
Cocco RR
Busse PJ
Sampson HA
Beyer K
Source :
Allergy [Allergy] 2008 Feb; Vol. 63 (2), pp. 198-204.
Publication Year :
2008

Abstract

Background: The delineation of allergenic (i.e. IgE-binding) epitopes in cow's milk proteins and the amino acids (AAs) critical for IgE-binding is necessary to understand better the structural properties of an allergen and to develop more efficacious immunotherapeutic reagents. Furthermore, this information may enable us to understand better cross-sensitivity between different allergens.<br />Methods: Eleven peptides, 10-14 AAs in length, representing the IgE-binding epitopes of kappa-casein were synthesized on a derivatized cellulose membrane with single AA substitutions at each position. Membranes were incubated with pooled sera from 15 milk-allergic patients and individual sera from 10 of the patients included in the pool.<br />Results: For 10/11 allergenic peptides, one to five different single AA substitutions resulted in elimination of IgE-binding of pooled patient sera. Overall at least one mutated peptide could be found for these 10 IgE-binding sites that resulted in a reduction of IgE-binding in at least 80% of the patients who recognized the native protein. Furthermore, the IgE-binding region at AA104-112 on bovine kappa-casein showed a high degree of similarity with the human kappa-casein, respectively, including the AAs critical for IgE-binding.<br />Conclusion: This finding suggests that critical AAs should be assessed with both pooled and individual patient sera to account for the B-cell epitope heterogeneity between patients, with cow's milk allergy. In addition, we identified two potentially cross-reactive peptides between bovine and human caseins of unknown clinical relevance.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1398-9995
Volume :
63
Issue :
2
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Allergy
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
18186809
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1398-9995.2007.01539.x