Pollens are an important source of allergens that trigger rhinitis or asthma. The allergenic extracts of pollens used to diagnose and treat allergies contain different allergenic antigens. Isolated allergenic proteins are employed in in vitro assays, skin tests and allergenic-specific immunotherapy. Calcium-binding allergens are clinically relevant antigens, and their allergenicity can be affected by Ca binding. In this work, a calmodulin was identified as an allergen from Amaranthus palmeri pollen, an important source of pollinosis in Europe, Asia and North America.
Allergenic calmodulin from A. palmeri pollen was isolated by size-exclusion chromatography and reverse-phase chromatography and identified by mass spectrometry. Sensitization to isolated calmodulin was evaluated by skin prick tests in patients with allergy to A. palmeri pollen.
Size-exclusion chromatography yielded two fractions that were recognized by the IgE of patients allergic to A. palmeri pollen. Mass spectrometry analysis of the fractions from reverse-phase chromatography showed peptide sequences that identified a calmodulin. Skin prick tests showed that the isolated calmodulin was recognized by 56% of patients allergic to A. palmeri pollen.
A. palmeri pollen calmodulin could be a clinically relevant allergen in patients sensitized to this source.
About The Expert
Mónica Luz Gómez-Esquivel
Guillermo Arturo Guidos-Fogelbach
María Isabel Rojo-Gutiérrez
Jaime Mellado-Abrego
Mario Alberto Bermejo-Guevara
Gloria Castillo-Narváez
Guillermo Velázquez-Sámano
Andrea Aida Velasco-Medina
Margaret Gissett Moya-Almonte
Carla Marcela Vallejos-Pereira
Marisol López-Hidalgo
Marycarmen Godínez-Victoria
César A Reyes-López
References
PubMed