Abstract

BackgroundPeanut allergy is a life-threatening condition; there is currently no cure. While whole allergen extracts are used for specific immunotherapy for many allergies, they can cause severe reactions and even fatalities in peanut allergy.ObjectiveTo identify short, HLA-degenerate CD4+ T cell epitope-based peptides of the major peanut allergen Ara h 1 that target allergen-specific T cells without causing IgE-mediated inflammatory cell activation, as candidates for safe peanut-specific immunotherapy.MethodsAra h 1-specific CD4+ T cell lines (TCL) were generated from peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) of peanut-allergic subjects using CFSE-based methodology. T cell epitopes were identified using CFSE and thymidine-based proliferation assays. Epitope HLA-restriction was investigated using blocking antibodies, HLA-genotyping and epitope prediction algorithms. Functional peanut-specific IgE reactivity to peptides was assessed by basophil activation assay.ResultsA total of 145 Ara h 1-specific TCL were generated from 18 HLA-diverse peanut-allergic subjects. The TCL recognized 20-mer peptides throughout Ara h 1. Nine 20-mers containing the most frequently recognized epitopes were selected and their recognition confirmed in 18 additional peanut-allergic subjects. Ten core epitopes were mapped within these 20-mers. These were HLA-DQ and/or HLA–DR restricted, with each presented on at least two different HLA-molecules. Seven short (≤ 20 aa) non-basophil-reactive peptides encompassing all core epitopes were designed and validated in peanut-allergic donor PBMC T cell assays.Conclusions and Clinical RelevanceShort CD4+ T cell epitope-based Ara h 1 peptides were identified as novel candidates for a safe, T cell targeted peanut-specific immunotherapy for HLA-diverse populations.

Highlights

  • Peanut allergy is the leading cause of food-induced anaphylactic fatalities world-wide [1, 2]

  • Selection of Ara h 1 20-mer peptides containing CD4+ T cell epitopes most reliably recognized by peanut-allergic subjects

  • A total of 145 Ara h 1-specific T cell lines (TCL) were generated from peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) of 18 HLA-diverse peanut-allergic subjects (Tables S1 and S2) by isolating and expanding antigenspecific CD4+CFSElo T cells from 7-day carboxyfluorescein diacetate succinimidylester (CFSE)-labelled PBMC cultures stimulated with Crude peanut extract (CPE), Ara h 1 or pools of Ara h 1 20-mer peptides collectively spanning the Ara h 1 sequence (Table S3)

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Peanut allergy is the leading cause of food-induced anaphylactic fatalities world-wide [1, 2] It is a major health care problem affecting 1–2% of the population [2,3,4], with clinical symptoms ranging from mild oropharyngeal irritation to life-threatening anaphylaxis. Unlike egg and milk food allergy that is present in infants and typically resolves by school age, peanut allergy is lifelong in 80% of the cases This significantly impairs the quality of life of afflicted individuals and their families [5,6,7], with further impact on the wider community through efforts to manage this severe condition [2, 8]. Most peanut-allergic subjects have accidental exposures which can have severe or even fatal consequences [1, 4, 5, 9]

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call