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An interdisciplinary approach to characterize peanut-allergic patients - first data from the FOOD@ consortium

Authors :
Worm, Margitta M.
Alexiou, Aikaterina
Höfer, Veronika
Birkner, Till
Jeanrenaud, Alexander C.S.N.
Fauchère, Florent
Pažur, Kristijan
Steinert, Carolin
Arnau-Soler, Aleix
Banerjee, Priyanka
Diefenbach, Andreas
Dobbertin-Welsch, Josefine
Dölle-Bierke, Sabine
Francuzik, W.
Ghauri, Ahla
Heller, Stephanie
Kalb, Birgit
Löber, Ulrike
Marenholz, Ingo
Markó, Lajos
Scheffel, Jörg
Potapenko, Olena
Roll, Stephanie
Lau, Susanne
Lee, Young-ae
Braun, Julian
Thiel, Andreas
Babina, Magda
Altrichter, Sabine
Forslund, Sofia Kirke
Beyer, Kirsten
Publica
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Wiley, 2022.

Abstract

Background: Peanut allergy is a frequent cause of food allergy and potentially life-threatening. Within this interdisciplinary research approach, we aim to unravel the complex mechanisms of peanut allergy. As a first step were applied in an exploratory manner the analysis of peanut allergic versus non-allergic controls. Methods: Biosamples were studied regarding DNA methylation signatures, gut microbiome, adaptive and innate immune cell populations, soluble signaling molecules and allergen-reactive antibody specificities. We applied a scalable systems medicine computational workflow to the assembled data. Results: We identified combined cellular and soluble biomarker signatures that stratify donors into peanut-allergic and non-allergic with high specificity. DNA methylation profiling revealed various genes of interest and stool microbiota differences in bacteria abundances. Conclusion: By extending our findings to a larger set of patients (e.g., children vs. adults), we will establish predictors for food allergy and tolerance and translate these as for example, indicators for interventional studies.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.dedup.wf.001..188f557f1b89b5622c1c24610379ec9a