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Environmental and Food Allergens

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Title: Environmental and Food Allergens


1
Environmental and Food Allergens
  • Carla Davis, MD
  • Research Fellow
  • Division of Allergy and Immunology
  • Department of Pediatrics
  • Texas Childrens Hospital
  • Baylor College of Medicine

2
Outline
  • Definition of aeroallergen
  • Collection Devices
  • Pollen Identification
  • Fungal Identification
  • Indoor Allergens
  • Food Allergens
  • Clinical consequences of cross reactions

3
Definition
  • Aeroallergens are airborne particles that induce
    allergic reactions in sensitized subjects and can
    cause respiratory, cutaneous, or conjunctival
    allergy
  • They can range from submicronic particles to
    relatively larger pollen grains, fungal spores
    and animal emanations
  • To be clinically significant, they must be
    buoyant, present in significant concentration and
    allergenic

4
Sampling Devices
  • For airborne allergens, several methods exist to
    quantify pollen grains and fungal spores
  • The devices rely on microscopic observation with
    counting of particles captured on collecting
    surfaces
  • Site selection is important and should be chosen
    for the specific situation (urban, rural or
    indoor conditions)

5
Sedimentation/gravity sampler
  • Standard device is a Durham sampler
  • A microscopic slide coated with petroleum jelly
    or silicone grease placed adhesive side up
    between a pair of parallel circular plates 3
    inches apart (agar plate also used)
  • After exposure, slides are stained with
    Calberlas solution (utilizes basic fuchsin), the
    pollen or fungi are identified and counted

6
Durham sampler
  • Advantages
  • Low cost
  • Spores are culturable
  • Disadvantages
  • Not quantitative
  • Collects particles well if gt10 µm
  • No separation of sizes of allergens

7
Rotating arm impactor samplers
  • Standard device is a Rotorod sampler
  • Plastic rods are mechanically rotated to increase
    the trapping efficiency of the narrow collection
    surface
  • The adhesive rod assembly is rotated at about
    2000 rpm to stimulate increased wind velocity
  • Volume sampled is calculated

8
Rotorod sampler
  • Advantages
  • Volumetric sampling
  • Simple operation
  • Moderate cost
  • Disadvantages
  • Not efficient for small particles (lt10 µm)
  • Spores are not culturable
  • Sizes are not separated

9
Suction device (wind directed)
  • Standard device is a Burkard sampler
  • A lightweight cylindrical device operating at 10
    L/min with a 14 x 2 mm slit in the top
  • The particles impact onto an adhesive coated
    microscope slide inserted through the side of the
    unit
  • Another type is called Allergenco MK-3

10
Burkard sampler
  • Advantages
  • Volumetric sampling
  • Collects small particles well (gt 5 µm)
  • Good for personal sampling
  • Disadvantages
  • High cost
  • No separation of sizes
  • Spores nonculturable

11
Cascade impactors
  • Standard device is an Anderson sampler
  • It collects particles directly on culture media
    positioned at 1,2 or 6 stages with each plate
    representing viable particles of a different size
    fraction
  • Particles of 1 µm or less are studied

12
Anderson sampler
  • Advantages
  • Volumetric detection
  • Small sizes detected well
  • Spores are culturable
  • Sizes are separated
  • Disadvantages
  • High cost
  • Must be manually positioned toward the airflow in
    moving air so usually restricted to indoor
    sampling

13
Pollen identification
  • Pollen dispersion is by wind (anemophilous), by
    insect (entomophilous) or by both (amphiphilous)
  • Outer wall of pollen grain is the exine
  • Exine is composed of inner nexine and outer
    sexine
  • Inner wall of pollen grain is the intine
  • Grains with circular or elliptical openings are
    porate
  • If the pore has a cap or plug, this is the
    operculum
  • Thickening of the exine around a pore is an aspis
    and ring around a pore is an annulus

14
Pollen identification
  • Slits or boat shaped areas of the thin exine are
    called furrows and grains with furrows are
    colpate
  • Pollens with both furrows and pores are colporate
  • Smooth surfaced grains are psilate , grains with
    spines are echinate, and grains with rods are
    baculate

15
Pollen Identification
  • Pine is inaperturate (no pores or furrows) with
    two air bladders, sized 40-100 µm
  • Think Mickey Mouse cap
  • Cedar and cottonwood are inaperturate and psilate
    (smaller than pine with size from 20-35 µm)

16
Pine
17
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18
Grass Identification
  • Grasses are very similar being monoporate with a
    prominent operculum
  • Size ranges from 20 to 60 µm

19
Salt grass
20
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21
Tricolporate grains
  • Ragweed (Ambrosia) has short furrows with
    indistinct pores while Sages (Artemisia) have
    more apparent apertures
  • Ragweed has short broad based spines and Sages
    are without spines

22
Ragweed
23
Sage
24
Periporate grains
  • Plaintains have between 6 and 11 pores
  • Amaranth and Chenopods are also periporate with
    20 to 80 pores per grain (this includes careless
    weed, pigweed, lambs quarter, and russian
    thistle)

25
Pigweed
26
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27
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28
Triporate grains
  • Birch has tri to pentaporate grains with pore
    associated finding such as annuli, aspidae, and
    arci
  • Hickory and pecan are triporate with pores evenly
    spaced close to the equatorial plane

29
Birch
30
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31
Tricolpate grains
  • Maple
  • Ash
  • Chestnut
  • Box Elder
  • Olive, Oak
  • Willow
  • All have grains with three furrows

32
Maple
33
Oak
34
Willow
35
Common name Genus/Species
  • Trees
  • Birch Betula verrucosa (Bet v 1,2,3)
  • Oak Quercus albus (Que a 1)
  • Hazel Corylus avellana (Cor a 1)
  • Olive Olea europaea (Ole e 1)
  • Japanese cedar Cryptomeria japonica (Cry j 1)
  • Mountain cedar Juniperus ashei (Jun a 1)
  • Cypress Cupress arizonica (Cup a 1)
  • Japanese cypress Chamaecyparis obtusa (Cha o 1)

36
Common name Genus/Species
  • Grasses
  • Rye Lollum perenne (Lol p 1-5)
  • Timothy Phleum pratense (Phl p 1-6)
  • Bermuda Cynodon dactylis (Cyn d 1)
  • Johnson Sorghum halepense (Sor h 1)
  • Weed
  • Short Ragweed Ambrosia artemisiifolia
  • (Amb a 1)
  • - Mugwort Artemisia vulgaris (Art v 1)

37
Fungal Identification
  • For fungal sampling, suction or cascade samplers
    are most efficient
  • The most direct way is to measure fungal allergen
    concentration in airborne or settled dust
    samples, but there are limitations in the
    measurement by immunoassay techniques
  • Currently, no standard method exists for
    collection and identification
  • Indoor spore counts over 1000/m3 are thought to
    be suggestive of mold contamination

38
Characterized fungal allergenic proteins
  • Alternaria alternata (Alt a 1)
  • Cladosporium herbabarium (Cla h 2)
  • Aspergillus fumigatus (Asp f 1)
  • Penicillium chrysogenum/notatum (Pen ch 13)
  • Penicillium citrinum (Pen c 3)
  • Candida albicans (Cand a 1)
  • Trichophyton tonsurans (Tri t 1)
  • Trichophyton rubrum ( Tri r 1)
  • Basidiomycota Malassezia furfur (Mala f 1),
    Coprinus comatus (Cop c 1), Psilocybe cubensis
    (Psi c 1)

39
Aspergillus fumigatus
40
Alternaria
41
Penicillium
42
Cladosporium
43
Indoor allergens
  • Major cat allergen Felis domesticus (Fel d 1)
  • Found in saliva and skin from sebaceous glands
    (primary site of production is the skin)
  • Minor allergens Fel d 2 (cat albumin) and Fel d 3
    (a cystatin) only cause sensitization in a
    minority of cat allergic patients.
  • Cat allergen is tenacious and can remain for
    months after a cat is removed from the home
  • Vectors carrying allergen are very small (lt25 µm)
    and stay airborne for a long time

44
Indoor allergens
  • Major dog allergen is Canis familiaris (Can f 1)
    which is detected on the coat and in saliva
  • Dust mite allergens are currently grouped into 2
    classes
  • Group 1 includes Der p1 and Der f 1, cysteine
    proteases with homology to papain
  • Group 2 includes Der p 2 and Der p 2, homologous
    proteins to the primate epididymus protein
  • Der f 3/Der p 3 are serine proteases

45
Indoor allergens
  • Cockroach major allergens
  • Blattella germanica and Periplaneta americana are
    the two species most known
  • Studies of cockroach allergen Bla g 2 in the air
    have shown little or no allergen except during
    vacuum cleaning
  • Potentially the allergen becomes airborne on
    relatively large particles which fall quickly
    after disturbance

46
Indoor allergens
  • Mouse (Mus musculus) major allergen is Mus m 1, a
    urinary protein whose function is pheromone
    bonding
  • Rat (Rattus norvegicus) major allergen is Rat n
    1, urinary per albumin
  • Both can induce IgE and IgG antibodies in animal
    handlers and scientists working with these animals

47
Food allergy
  • Class 1 food allergy is considered traditional
    because it denotes sensitization to food
    allergens through the gastrointestinal tract
  • Water soluble glycoproteins which are stable to
    treatment with heat, acid, and proteases
  • Class 2 food allergy denotes sensitization to
    food as a consequence of an allergic
    sensitization to inhalant allergens
  • Plant derived proteins highly heat labile and
    difficult to extract

48
Cows milk allergens
  • as1-Casein (Bos d 8 - Bos domesticus)
  • as2-Casein
  • ß-Casein
  • ?-Casein
  • Whey
  • ß-Lactoglobulin (Bos d 5)
  • a-Lactalbumin (Bos d 4)
  • Serum albumin (Bos d 6)
  • Studies have suggested recently that casein
    proteins are the more allergenic

49
Egg allergen
  • Chicken Egg White
  • Accounts for the most common IgE mediated food
    allergy in children
  • Yolk less allergenic than the white
  • Ovalbumin ( Gal d 1 )
  • Ovomucoid ( Gal d 2 ) responsible for the vast
    majority of clinical reactivity in egg allergic
    children
  • Ovotransferrin ( Gal d 3 )
  • About half of children allergic to eggs can
    ingest small amounts of egg protein in
    extensively heated (baked) products (lack IgE to
    sequential vs. conformational epitopes)

50
Peanut/Soybean Allergens
  • Peanut most common food allergy above age 4
    years
  • Vicilin family of seed storage proteins- Ara h 1
  • Conglutin family of storage proteins- Ara h 2
  • Glycinin family of seed storage proteins - Ara h
    3
  • Soybean
  • Glycinin G1 acidic chain allergenic epitopes
    are homologous to Ara h 3
  • Profilin is an actin bonding protein first
    identified in Birch pollen (Bet v 2) and is seen
    in Gly m 3 as well as a number of other fruits
    and vegetables

51
Seafood Allergens
  • Fish
  • The major allergen in codfish is Parvalbumin- Gad
    c 1 (Gadus callarias)
  • Shrimp
  • The major allergen in shrimp is Tropomyosin - Pen
    a 1 (Penaeus species)
  • Invertebrate tropomysins are highly homologous
    and tend to be allergenic (those from
    crustaceans, dust mites, cockroaches and
    mollusks)

52
Lipid Transfer Proteins
  • Lipid Transfer Protein Allergens
    (pathogen-related proteins group 14)
  • Apple - Mal d 3
  • Apricot - Pru ar 3
  • Peach - Pru p 3
  • Plum - Pru d 1
  • Corn - Zea m 14
  • When fruit allergy develops in the absence of
    pollen allergy, there is evidence to suggest
    reactions are directed at LTPs

53
Class 2 Food Allergens (Cross-reactive and
Associated with Oral Allergy Syndrome)
  • Pathogen-related protein 5
  • Apple Mal d 2 Thaumatin-homologue
  • Cherry Pru av 2 Thaumatin
  • Birch Bet v 1 Homologues (pathogen-related
    protein 10)
  • Apple Mal d 1
  • Cherry Pru av 1
  • Apricot Pru ar 1
  • Pear Pyr c 1
  • Carrot Dau c 1
  • Celery Api g 1
  • Parsley pcPR 1 and 2
  • Hazelnut Cor a 1

54
Homologous pathogen related protein
  • Birch Bet v 2 Homologues (celery-mugwort-spice
    syndrome)
  • Latex Hev b 8
  • Celery Api g 4
  • Potato
  • Cherry Pru av 4
  • Pear Pyr c 4
  • Peanut Ara h 5
  • Soybean Gly m 3

55
Pollen Food Syndrome Association
56
Conclusions
  • As allergists/immunologists it is important for
    us to be able to identify the allergen/antigens
    that are causing our patients symptoms
  • Homologous proteins in cross reacting foods may
    cause serious clinical consequences
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