Abstract

Short ragweed allergenic extract has been studied by means of crossed radioimmunoelectrophoresis (CRIE) with the use of sera from 37 allergic patients and the relevant control sera. In this study 22 of 52 antigens, detectable in crossed immunoelectrophoresis (CIE) against polyspecific rabbit anti-ragweed IgG, were able to bind specific human IgE to their corresponding immunoprecipitates. This binding was semiquantified by comparison with the binding of a standard serum pool. Nine antigens were identified as important allergens, including the previously isolated components, AgE, AgK, and Ra6. Certain allergens (e.g., AgE, AgK, and Ag 31) bound IgE in almost all patients' sera, whereas others showed a bimodal distribution for sera of responder and nonresponder patients. The total CRIE score was found to correlate significantly both with ragweed-specific serum IgE antibody determined by RAST (rs = 0.88; p less than 0.001) and with total IgE level (rs = 0.55; p less than 0.01). Patient's CRIE scores to AgE also correlated significantly with their specific IgE antibody to AgE measured by RIA (r = 0.47; p less than 0.01) and with skin-test sensitivity to AgE (r = 0.44; p less than 0.05). It was concluded that CRIE is well suited for identification of important ragweed allergens without the previous need for laborious isolation procedures.

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