A new allergen from ragweed (Ambrosia artemisiifolia) with homology to art v 1 from mugwort
Renaud Léonard (BOKU-University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences)
Nicole Wopfner (University of Salzburg)
Martin Pabst (BOKU-University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences)
Johannes Stadlmann (BOKU-University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences)
Bent O. Petersen (Carlsberg Laboratory)
Jens Duus (Carlsberg Laboratory)
Martin Himly (University of Salzburg)
Christian Radauer (Medical University of Vienna)
Gabriele Gadermaier (University of Salzburg)
Ebrahim Razzazi-Fazeli (University of Veterinary Medicine)
Fatima Ferreira (University of Salzburg)
Friedrich Altmann (BOKU-University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences)
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Abstract
Art v 1, the major pollen allergen of the composite plant mugwort (Artemisia vulgaris) has been identified recently as a thionin-like protein with a bulky arabinogalactan-protein moiety. A close relative of mugwort, ragweed (Ambrosia artemisiifolia) is an important allergen source in North America, and, since 1990, ragweed has become a growing health concern in Europe as well. Weed pollen-sensitized patients demonstrated IgE reactivity to a ragweed pollen protein of apparently 29-31 kDa. This reaction could be inhibited by the mugwort allergen Art v 1. The purified ragweed pollen protein consisted of a 57-amino acid-long defensin-like domain with high homology to Art v 1 and a C-terminal proline-rich domain. This part contained hydroxyproline-linked arabinogalactan chains with one galactose and 5 to 20 and more α-arabinofuranosyl residues with some β-arabinoses in terminal positions as revealed by high field NMR. The ragweed protein contained only small amounts of the single hydroxyproline-linked β-arabinosyl residues, which form an important IgE binding determinant in Art v 1. cDNA clones for this protein were obtained from ragweed flowers. Immunological characterization revealed that the recombinant ragweed protein reacted with >30% of the weed pollen allergic patients. Therefore, this protein from ragweed pollen constitutes a novel important ragweed allergen and has been designated Amb a 4.