Greater epitope recognition of shrimp allergens by children than by adults suggests that shrimp sensitization decreases with age

Background Shellfish allergy is a long-lasting disorder typically affecting adults. Despite its high prevalence, there is limited information about allergenic shrimp proteins and the epitopes implicated in such allergic reactions. Objective We sought to identify the IgE-binding epitopes of the 4 shr...

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Published inJournal of allergy and clinical immunology Vol. 125; no. 6; pp. 1286 - 1293.e3
Main Authors Ayuso, Rosalía, MD, PhD, Sánchez-Garcia, Silvia, MD, Lin, Jing, PhD, Fu, Zhiyan, PhD, Ibáñez, María Dolores, MD, PhD, Carrillo, Teresa, MD, PhD, Blanco, Carlos, MD, PhD, Goldis, Marina, MD, Bardina, Ludmila, MS, Sastre, Joaquín, MD, PhD, Sampson, Hugh A., MD
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published New York, NY Elsevier Inc 01.06.2010
Elsevier
Elsevier Limited
Subjects
SCP
MLC
AK
FDR
HSA
IgE
Age
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Summary:Background Shellfish allergy is a long-lasting disorder typically affecting adults. Despite its high prevalence, there is limited information about allergenic shrimp proteins and the epitopes implicated in such allergic reactions. Objective We sought to identify the IgE-binding epitopes of the 4 shrimp allergens and to characterize epitope recognition profiles of children and adults with shrimp allergy. Methods Fifty-three subjects, 34 children and 19 adults, were selected with immediate allergic reactions to shrimp, increased shrimp-specific serum IgE levels, and positive immunoblot binding to shrimp. Study subjects and 7 nonatopic control subjects were tested by means of peptide microarray for IgE binding with synthetic overlapping peptides spanning the sequences of Litopenaeus vannamei shrimp tropomyosin, arginine kinase (AK), myosin light chain (MLC), and sarcoplasmic calcium-binding protein (SCP). The Wilcoxon test was used to determine significant differences in z scores between patients and control subjects. Results The median shrimp IgE level was 4-fold higher in children than in adults (47 vs 12.5 kUA /L). The frequency of allergen recognition was higher in children (tropomyosin, 81% [94% for children and 61% for adults]; MLC, 57% [70% for children and 31% for adults]; AK, 51% [67% for children and 21% for adults]; and SCP, 45% [59% for children and 21% for adults]), whereas control subjects showed negligible binding. Seven IgE-binding regions were identified in tropomyosin by means of peptide microarray, confirming previously identified shrimp epitopes. In addition, 3 new epitopes were identified in tropomyosin (epitopes 1, 3, and 5b-c), 5 epitopes were identified in MLC, 3 epitopes were identified in SCP, and 7 epitopes were identified in AK. Interestingly, frequency of individual epitope recognition, as well as intensity of IgE binding, was significantly greater in children than in adults for all 4 proteins. Conclusions Children with shrimp allergy have greater shrimp-specific IgE antibody levels and show more intense binding to shrimp peptides and greater epitope diversity than adults.
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ISSN:0091-6749
1097-6825
DOI:10.1016/j.jaci.2010.03.010