Abstract

Horse serum albumin is present in the near vicinity of the animal, while dog and cat serum albumins are very common allergens present in house dust. Human patients clinically defined as allergic to horse could react with horse serum albumin by means of IgE or IgG antibodies. Studies regarding the specificities of these antibodies by inhibition enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) and depletion experiments have demonstrated that they are directed against dog serum albumin and cross-react not only with horse serum albumin but with other serum albumins from different origins. To investigate these observations further, we isolated and characterized three tryptic peptides (P1, P2 and P3) from horse serum albumin. The peptide P1 contains loops 1 and 2 of the first domain, P2 is derived from loop 4 of the second domain, and P3 contains the disulphide loop 9 of the third domain. These were able to inhibit the binding of the patients' IgE and IgG antibodies to horse albumin as well as to dog and cat serum albumins. This indicates that these peptides are involved in the observed cross-reactions. They also shared common epitopes, as revealed by human IgE antibodies. After reduction and alkylation, they totally lost their inhibitory capacity, suggesting that the intra-chain disulphide bridges, essential for the preservation of the loop structure, probably maintain their allergenic/antigenic reactivity.

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