Journal Review from US BioTek Laboratories
Clin Exp Allergy 1998 Jul;28(7):824-33 Related Articles, Books,
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Anti-Betalactoglobulin IgG Antibodies
Bind to a Specific Profile of Epitopes When Patients Are Allergic
to Cow's Milk Proteins.
Duchateau J, Michils A, Lambert J, Gossart B, Casimir G.
Immunology Department, Centre Hospitalier Universitaire Brugmann-HUDERF,
Universite Libre de Bruxelles, Brussels, Belgium.
BACKGROUND: We demonstrated recently that mite-allergic patients
differed from healthy controls in the specificity of their IgG
antibodies towards mite antigens. OBJECTIVE: The present study
investigates whether these discriminatory IgG responses could be
associated with the expression and the evolution of clinical manifestations
in allergy to cow's milk proteins. METHODS: Antibody specificity
was evaluated by comparing IgG-binding to native bovine beta-lactoglobulin
(nBLG) and its products of pepsin hydrolysis (dBLG) using a solid-phase
enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA). Antibody specificity
was further investigated in competitive ELISA using streptavidin-biotin
technology with purified IgG fractions from selected subjects and
specific mouse monoclonals raised against BLG. RESULTS: IgG antibodies
from CM-intolerant or allergic sera (n=222) showed a higher degree
of binding to nBLG than to dBLG, while control sera showed similar
levels to both nBLG and dBLG (n=99 children/65 adults). Sera from
symptomatic patients, wether or not they contained IgE antibodies,
demonstrated group-segregating capacities to compete with pooled
purified IgG from each clinical class, and with selected murine
anti-nBLG monoclonal antibodies for binding to n- and dBLG. Furthermore,
this inhibitory capacity shifted dramatically in a small subset
(n=14) of children as they developed CM-tolerance. CONCLUSIONS:
The IgG responses to BLG of CM-intolerant or allergic patients
are very different from those of healthy controls, being characterized
not only by increased titres but also similar patterns of modified
specificity, including a marked preference for conformational epitopes.
Cross-competition experiments confirmed that the restricted specificity
was clinically associated, appearing as an immunological signature,
which allowed almost complete discrimination between patient groups.
This phenomenon is a particularly promising diagnostic feature
in this category of young patients where conventional tests usually
only document the status of sensitization. |