The T cell response to Art v 1, the major mugwort pollen allergen, is dominated by one epitope.
Mugwort (Artemisia vulgaris) pollen allergens represent the main cause of pollinosis in late summer in Europe. At least 95% of sera from mugwort pollen-allergic patients contain IgE against a highly glycosylated 24- to 28-kDa glycoprotein. Recently, this major allergen, termed Art v 1, was characterized, cloned in Escherichia coli, and produced in recombinant form. In the present study we characterized and compared the T cell responses to natural (nArt v 1) and recombinant Art v 1 (rArt v 1). In vitro T cell responses to nArt v 1 and rArt v 1 were studied in PBMC, T cell lines ( TCL), and T cell clones (TCC) established from PBMC of mugwort-allergic patients. Stimulation of PBMC or allergen-specific TCL with either nArt v 1 or rArt v 1 resulted in comparable proliferative T cell responses. Eighty-five percent of the TCC reactive with rArt v 1 cross-reacted with the natural protein. The majority of the CD4(+)CD8(-)TCR alphabeta(+) Art v 1-specific TCC, obtained from 10 different donors, belonged to the Th2 phenotype. Epitope mapping of TCL and TCC using overlapping peptides revealed a single immunodominant T cell epitope recognized by 81% of the patients. Inhibition experiments demonstrated that the presentation of this peptide is restricted by HLA-DR molecules. In conclusion, the T cell response to Art v 1 is characterized by one strong immunodominant epitope and evidently differs from the T cell responses to other common pollen allergens known to contain multiple T cell epitopes. Therefore, mugwort allergy may be an ideal candidate for a peptide-based immunotherapy approach.[1]References
- The T cell response to Art v 1, the major mugwort pollen allergen, is dominated by one epitope. Jahn-Schmid, B., Kelemen, P., Himly, M., Bohle, B., Fischer, G., Ferreira, F., Ebner, C. J. Immunol. (2002) [Pubmed]
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