Subpollen particles are rich carriers of major short ragweed allergens and NADH dehydrogenases: quantitative proteomic and allergomic study
Authors
Smiljanić, Katarina
Apostolović, Danijela

Trifunović, S.

Ognjenović, Jana
Perusko, M.

Mihajlović, Luka

Burazer, Lidija

van Hage, Marianne

Ćirković-Veličković, Tanja

Article (Accepted Version)
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Background: Short ragweed (Ambrosia artemisiifolia) allergies affect more than 36 million people annually. Ragweed pollen grains release subpollen particles (SPP) of respirable size upon hydration or a change in air electrical conditions. The aim of this study was to characterize the proteomes and allergomes of short ragweed SPP and total pollen protein extract (TOT), and compare their effects with those of standard aqueous pollen protein extract (APE) using sera from short ragweed pollen-sensitized patients. Methods: Quantitative 2D gel-based and shotgun proteomics, 1D and 2D immunoblotting, and quantitative ELISA were applied. Novel SPP extraction and preparation protocols enabled appropriate sample preparation and further downstream analysis by quantitative proteomics. Results: The SPP fraction contained the highest proportion (94%) of the allergome, with the largest quantities of the minor Amb a 4 and major Amb a 1 allergens, and as unique, NADH dehydrogenases. APE was the richest ...in Amb a 6, Amb a 5 and Amb a 3, and TOT fraction was the richest in the Amb a 8 allergens (89% and 83% of allergome, respectively). Allergenic potency correlated well among the three fractions tested, with 1D immunoblots demonstrating a slight predominance of IgE reactivity to SPP compared to TOT and APE. However, the strongest IgE binding in ELISA was noted against APE. New allergenic candidates, phosphoglycerate mutase and phosphoglucomutase, were identified in all the three pollen fractions. Enolase, UTP-glucose-1-phosphate uridylyltransferase and polygalacturonase were observed in SPP and TOT fractions as novel allergens of the short ragweed pollen, as previously described. Conclusion and Clinical Relevance: We demonstrated that the complete major (Amb a 1 and 11) and almost all minor (Amb a 3, 4, 5, 6, 8 and 9) short ragweed pollen allergen repertoire as well as NADH oxidases are present in SPP, highlighting an important role for SPP in allergic sensitization to short ragweed.
Keywords:
Ambrosia artemisiifolia / label-free quantification / new short ragweed allergens / pollen allergomes / subpollen particlesSource:
Clinical and Experimental Allergy, 2017, 47, 6, 815-828Publisher:
- Blackwell Publishing Ltd
Funding / projects:
- Reinforcement of the Faculty of Chemistry, University of Belgrade, towards becoming a Center of Excellence in the region of WB for Molecular Biotechnology and Food research (EU-256716)
- Molecular properties and modifications of some respiratory and nutritional allergens (RS-172024)
Note:
- This is the peer‐reviewed version of the article: Smiljanic, K.; Apostolovic, D.; Trifunovic, S.; Ognjenovic, J.; Perusko, M.; Mihajlovic, L.; Burazer, L.; Hage, M. van; Velickovic, T. C. Subpollen Particles Are Rich Carriers of Major Short Ragweed Allergens and NADH Dehydrogenases: Quantitative Proteomic and Allergomic Study. Clinical & Experimental Allergy 2017, 47 (6), 815–828.https://doi.org/10.1111/cea.12874
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- Version of
https://doi.org/10.1111/cea.12874 - Version of
http://intor.torlakinstitut.com/handle/123456789/479
DOI: 10.1111/cea.12874
ISSN: 0954-7894
PubMed: 28000951
WoS: 000402653100011
Scopus: 2-s2.0-85009944152
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TorlakTY - JOUR AU - Smiljanić, Katarina AU - Apostolović, Danijela AU - Trifunović, S. AU - Ognjenović, Jana AU - Perusko, M. AU - Mihajlović, Luka AU - Burazer, Lidija AU - van Hage, Marianne AU - Ćirković-Veličković, Tanja PY - 2017 UR - http://intor.torlakinstitut.com/handle/123456789/610 AB - Background: Short ragweed (Ambrosia artemisiifolia) allergies affect more than 36 million people annually. Ragweed pollen grains release subpollen particles (SPP) of respirable size upon hydration or a change in air electrical conditions. The aim of this study was to characterize the proteomes and allergomes of short ragweed SPP and total pollen protein extract (TOT), and compare their effects with those of standard aqueous pollen protein extract (APE) using sera from short ragweed pollen-sensitized patients. Methods: Quantitative 2D gel-based and shotgun proteomics, 1D and 2D immunoblotting, and quantitative ELISA were applied. Novel SPP extraction and preparation protocols enabled appropriate sample preparation and further downstream analysis by quantitative proteomics. Results: The SPP fraction contained the highest proportion (94%) of the allergome, with the largest quantities of the minor Amb a 4 and major Amb a 1 allergens, and as unique, NADH dehydrogenases. APE was the richest in Amb a 6, Amb a 5 and Amb a 3, and TOT fraction was the richest in the Amb a 8 allergens (89% and 83% of allergome, respectively). Allergenic potency correlated well among the three fractions tested, with 1D immunoblots demonstrating a slight predominance of IgE reactivity to SPP compared to TOT and APE. However, the strongest IgE binding in ELISA was noted against APE. New allergenic candidates, phosphoglycerate mutase and phosphoglucomutase, were identified in all the three pollen fractions. Enolase, UTP-glucose-1-phosphate uridylyltransferase and polygalacturonase were observed in SPP and TOT fractions as novel allergens of the short ragweed pollen, as previously described. Conclusion and Clinical Relevance: We demonstrated that the complete major (Amb a 1 and 11) and almost all minor (Amb a 3, 4, 5, 6, 8 and 9) short ragweed pollen allergen repertoire as well as NADH oxidases are present in SPP, highlighting an important role for SPP in allergic sensitization to short ragweed. PB - Blackwell Publishing Ltd T2 - Clinical and Experimental Allergy T1 - Subpollen particles are rich carriers of major short ragweed allergens and NADH dehydrogenases: quantitative proteomic and allergomic study EP - 828 IS - 6 SP - 815 VL - 47 DO - 10.1111/cea.12874 ER -
@article{ author = "Smiljanić, Katarina and Apostolović, Danijela and Trifunović, S. and Ognjenović, Jana and Perusko, M. and Mihajlović, Luka and Burazer, Lidija and van Hage, Marianne and Ćirković-Veličković, Tanja", year = "2017", abstract = "Background: Short ragweed (Ambrosia artemisiifolia) allergies affect more than 36 million people annually. Ragweed pollen grains release subpollen particles (SPP) of respirable size upon hydration or a change in air electrical conditions. The aim of this study was to characterize the proteomes and allergomes of short ragweed SPP and total pollen protein extract (TOT), and compare their effects with those of standard aqueous pollen protein extract (APE) using sera from short ragweed pollen-sensitized patients. Methods: Quantitative 2D gel-based and shotgun proteomics, 1D and 2D immunoblotting, and quantitative ELISA were applied. Novel SPP extraction and preparation protocols enabled appropriate sample preparation and further downstream analysis by quantitative proteomics. Results: The SPP fraction contained the highest proportion (94%) of the allergome, with the largest quantities of the minor Amb a 4 and major Amb a 1 allergens, and as unique, NADH dehydrogenases. APE was the richest in Amb a 6, Amb a 5 and Amb a 3, and TOT fraction was the richest in the Amb a 8 allergens (89% and 83% of allergome, respectively). Allergenic potency correlated well among the three fractions tested, with 1D immunoblots demonstrating a slight predominance of IgE reactivity to SPP compared to TOT and APE. However, the strongest IgE binding in ELISA was noted against APE. New allergenic candidates, phosphoglycerate mutase and phosphoglucomutase, were identified in all the three pollen fractions. Enolase, UTP-glucose-1-phosphate uridylyltransferase and polygalacturonase were observed in SPP and TOT fractions as novel allergens of the short ragweed pollen, as previously described. Conclusion and Clinical Relevance: We demonstrated that the complete major (Amb a 1 and 11) and almost all minor (Amb a 3, 4, 5, 6, 8 and 9) short ragweed pollen allergen repertoire as well as NADH oxidases are present in SPP, highlighting an important role for SPP in allergic sensitization to short ragweed.", publisher = "Blackwell Publishing Ltd", journal = "Clinical and Experimental Allergy", title = "Subpollen particles are rich carriers of major short ragweed allergens and NADH dehydrogenases: quantitative proteomic and allergomic study", pages = "828-815", number = "6", volume = "47", doi = "10.1111/cea.12874" }
Smiljanić, K., Apostolović, D., Trifunović, S., Ognjenović, J., Perusko, M., Mihajlović, L., Burazer, L., van Hage, M.,& Ćirković-Veličković, T.. (2017). Subpollen particles are rich carriers of major short ragweed allergens and NADH dehydrogenases: quantitative proteomic and allergomic study. in Clinical and Experimental Allergy Blackwell Publishing Ltd., 47(6), 815-828. https://doi.org/10.1111/cea.12874
Smiljanić K, Apostolović D, Trifunović S, Ognjenović J, Perusko M, Mihajlović L, Burazer L, van Hage M, Ćirković-Veličković T. Subpollen particles are rich carriers of major short ragweed allergens and NADH dehydrogenases: quantitative proteomic and allergomic study. in Clinical and Experimental Allergy. 2017;47(6):815-828. doi:10.1111/cea.12874 .
Smiljanić, Katarina, Apostolović, Danijela, Trifunović, S., Ognjenović, Jana, Perusko, M., Mihajlović, Luka, Burazer, Lidija, van Hage, Marianne, Ćirković-Veličković, Tanja, "Subpollen particles are rich carriers of major short ragweed allergens and NADH dehydrogenases: quantitative proteomic and allergomic study" in Clinical and Experimental Allergy, 47, no. 6 (2017):815-828, https://doi.org/10.1111/cea.12874 . .