Abstract
Background: Wheat flour proteins are allergens for 60% to 70% of bakers with workplace-related respiratory symptoms. Objective: The aim of the study was to investigate the variability of IgE antibody patterns of wheat flour-sensitized bakers and to identify the most frequently recognized allergens. Methods: Water/salt-soluble wheat flour proteins from the cultivar Bussard were separated by using 2-dimensional gel electrophoresis with immobilized pH gradients. IgE-reactive proteins were identified by means of immunoblotting with sera of 10 subjects with baker's asthma. Mass spectrometric finger-printing was used to identify the proteins most frequently recognized by IgE. Results: The IgE immunoblots obtained with 10 different sera exhibited a remarkable heterogeneity. Each patient showed an individual IgE-binding pattern with 4 to 50 different allergen spots. Altogether, more than 100 IgE-binding protein spots were detected. Nine of the predominant IgE-binding protein spots were identified by using mass spectrometric fingerprinting. The obtained masses matched 2 different isoforms of glycerinaldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase from Hordeum vulgare, triosephosphate isomerase from H vulgare, and serpin, a serine proteinase inhibitor from Triticum aestivum. Conclusions: The results show a great interindividual variation of IgE-binding patterns of wheat flour proteins in baker's asthma. The clinical relevance of the identified 4 new allergens will be further investigated in the near future.
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Sander, I., Flagge, A., Merget, R., Halder, T. M., Meyer, H. E., & Baur, X. (2001). Identification of wheat flour allergens by means of 2-dimensional immunoblotting. Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology, 107(5 SUPPL.), 907–913. https://doi.org/10.1067/mai.2001.113761
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