4.6 Article

A hypoallergenic variant of the major birch pollen allergen shows distinct characteristics in antigen processing and T-cell activation

Journal

ALLERGY
Volume 67, Issue 11, Pages 1375-1382

Publisher

WILEY-BLACKWELL
DOI: 10.1111/all.12016

Keywords

allergen-specific immunotherapy; Bet v 1; hypoallergen; T-cell modulation

Funding

  1. Biomay AG
  2. Christian Doppler Research Association, Austria
  3. Austrian Science Fund [SFB-F4610-B19]

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Background BM4 is a novel genetically engineered variant of the major birch pollen allergen Bet v 1 that lacks the typical Bet v 1-like fold and displays negligible IgE-binding but strong T cellactivating capacity. The aim of this study was to elucidate possible differences between BM4 and Bet v 1 in internalization, antigen processing, and presentation. Methods Proliferative responses to BM4 and Bet v 1 of peripheral blood mononuclear cells and Bet v 1-specific T-cell clones were compared. Fluorescently labeled BM4 and Bet v 1 were used to study surface binding, endocytosis, and intracellular degradation by monocyte-derived DC (mdDC). Both proteins were digested by endolysosomal extracts of mdDC. BM4- and Bet v 1-pulsed mdDC were employed to assess the kinetics of activation of Bet v 1-specific T-cell clones and the polarization of naive T cells. Results BM4 displayed a significantly stronger T cellactivating capacity than Bet v 1. Furthermore, BM4 showed increased surface binding and internalization as well as faster endolysosomal degradation compared with Bet v 1. BM4-pulsed mdDC induced enhanced proliferative responses at earlier time-points in Bet v 1-specific T-cell clones and promoted less IL-5 production in T cells than Bet v 1-pulsed mdDC. Conclusion The loss of the Bet v 1-fold changes the protein's interaction with the human immune system at the level of antigen-presenting cells resulting in altered T-cell responses. By combining low IgE-binding with strong and modulating T cellactivating capacity, BM4 represents a highly interesting candidate for specific immunotherapy of birch pollen allergy.

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