Abstract
Olive pollen is a major cause of immunoglobulin E (IgE)-mediated allergy in Mediterranean countries. It is expected to become a worldwide leading allergenic source because olive cultivation is increasing in many countries. Ole e 15 belongs to the cyclophilin pan-allergen family, which includes highly cross-reactive allergens from non-related plant, animal and mold species. Here, the amino acid differences between Ole e 15 and its weak cross-reactive human homolog PPIA were grafted onto Ole e 15 to assess the contribution of specific surface areas to the IgE-binding. Eight Ole e 15-PPIA chimeras were produced in E. coli, purified and tested with 20 sera from Ole e 15-sensitized patients with olive pollen allergy by ELISA experiments. The contribution of linear epitopes was analyzed using twelve overlapping peptides spanning the entire Ole e 15 sequence. All the patients displayed a diverse reduction of the IgE-reactivity to the chimeras, revealing a highly polyclonal and patient-specific response to Ole e 15. IgE-epitopes are distributed across the entire Ole e 15 surface. Two main surface areas containing relevant conformational epitopes have been characterized. This is the first study to identify important IgE-binding regions on the surface of an allergenic cyclophilin.
Similar content being viewed by others
Introduction
Allergy is an immunoglobulin E (IgE)-mediated hypersensitivity which has become an important health problem in industrialized countries, affecting around 30% of their population. House dust mites and grass pollen are the most important aeroallergen sources1,2. However, in some regions, a higher prevalence of sensitization to specific local sources can be reached. Cultivated olive tree (Olea europaea ssp. europaea var. europaea) pollen is one of the main causes of pollinosis in the Mediterranean basin, being the main sensitizer in those areas where it is extensively cultivated3. Moreover, due to the continuous promotion of the Mediterranean diet, there is a rising demand for oil and olive fruit production worldwide, which will highly increase the number of olive trees and as a consequence, the number of allergic patients to this pollen4. To date, a total of fifteen olive allergens (Ole e 1 to 15) have been identified5,6,7. Besides, an extensive proteomic profiling of olive pollen has been recently reported, making this important allergenic source one of the best characterized8.
About 13% of the olive pollen allergic patients sera present IgE against Ole e 15, an allergen belonging to the group of cyclophilins. These proteins normally exhibit peptidyl-prolyl cis-trans isomerase activity and are part of the protein superfamily of immunophilins9,10. Due to their essential role in protein folding, cyclophilins are present in the cells of all organisms, and have been described as allergens in animals11, molds12,13,14 and plants15,16,17. Importantly, the amino acid sequence similarity among cyclophilins from unrelated species is high, and they could be considered pan-allergens due to their wide range of cross-reactivity13. Allergenic mold cyclophilins Mala s 6, Asp f 11 and Asp f 27 from Malassezia sympodialis and Aspergillus fumigatus, are major allergens whose structure and immunological properties have been extensively studied, showing in vitro and in vivo cross-reactivity between them and also with their human homologs peptidyl-prolyl cis-trans isomerases A (PPIA) and B (PPIB)13,18,19. Ole e 15, as well as other plant pollen allergenic cyclophilins, like Bet v 7 from birch and Cat r 1 from periwinkle, belong to the subgroup of divergent cyclophilins, which present a conserved Glu83 residue, two invariable cysteines and an additional stretch of seven amino acids with the consensus sequence XXGKXLH called divergent loop20. These allergens have also been shown to cross react with cyclophilins from plants8,17,21, animals (including human)8 and molds17,21.
The availability of structural information is essential to understand the cross-reactivity among different allergens, determine the nature and location of their IgE-binding epitopes and use this information to design safer allergen-specific immunotherapy strategies22,23. Multiple human, parasite and mold cyclophilins structures have been reported since the first PPIA crystal structure was determined24,25. Moreover, the structure of wheat, orange tree and periwinkle cyclophilins have been recently reported17,26,27, revealing important information about the distribution and accessibility of amino acids across the protein surface, and the regulatory function of specific structural elements, such as the divergent loop.
IgE-binding epitopes of most aeroallergens are mainly conformational and strongly dependent on the native allergen conformation28,29,30,31. This makes the analysis of epitopes a challenge, and only a few conformational IgE epitopes have been structurally solved using nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) or X-ray crystallography32,33,34. Nevertheless, there are other strategies to identify specific IgE-binding surface areas, such as the use of random-peptide libraries mimicking real epitopes23, the design of point amino acid mutations to generate hypoallergenic variants35, epitope grafting36 and protein engineering to create chimeric proteins of the allergen and homologous proteins37,38. Although three main linear B-cell epitopes responsible for the cross-reactivity between mold cyclophilins and PPIA have been predicted by in silico analysis39, there is no experimental information available about the relevant epitopes of these allergens. Here, we aimed to identify the contribution of specific areas of Ole e 15 to the IgE-binding. After in vitro assessment of Ole e 15 and PPIA cross-reactivity, and in silico structure comparison and calculation of solvent-accessible surface areas, eight chimeras carrying specific regions from PPIA were designed using Ole e 15 as scaffold. Their IgE-binding capacity was assessed by means of ELISA and inhibition ELISA experiments and thus, relevant IgE-binding regions of Ole e 15 were identified.
Results
In-vitro Ole e 15-PPIA IgE cross-reactivity analysis and design of Ole e 15-PPIA chimeras
Six sera from olive pollen allergic patients reaching OD492nm values higher than 0.4 when measuring IgE-binding to Ole e 15 by ELISA were tested with PPIA (Supplementary Fig. S1). Only serum 10 an 12 reached positive but low OD492nm values when they were ten-fold diluted (Supplementary Fig. S1a). Inhibition IgE ELISA with serum 12 (Supplementary Fig. S1b) confirmed the previous results, with PPIA reaching inhibition values from 28% to 58% at concentrations at which Ole e 15 reached complete inhibition (4 μg/mL to 400 μg/mL).
To find an explanation for this low-degree of IgE cross-reactivity in spite of the high sequence identity shared, the amino acid sequences and 3D-structures of Ole e 15 and PPIA were compared to identify their main differences (Figs 1 and 2, and Supplementary Fig. S2). Three surface patches comprising the amino acid stretches with the majority of amino acid differences between both molecules were identified: Patch 1 (Ole e 15 stretch E43 to A59: divergent loop and surrounding residues), Patch 2 (Ole e 15 stretch M1 to A26: N-terminal β-strands β1 and β2, and surrounding residues; and stretch Q138 to S172: C-terminal β-strand β8, α-helix α2 and the connecting loop), and Patch 3 (Ole e 15 stretch A76 to G101: region connecting β-strand β4 to β5). A fourth patch corresponding to the most conserved surface region, including the active site, was also found (Patch 4, Ole e 15 stretch H61 to T75 and M107 to V134: β-strands β3, β4 and β7, and the loops connecting β-strands β3 to β4, β6 to β7, and β7 to β8). The main exposed amino acids of each patch (relative value to the isolated individual amino acid SASA higher than 25%) are described in Supplementary Fig. S2. The calculated Ole e 15 SASA per residue revealed a total SASA value of 14282.87 Å2, with values of 1343.81 (9.4%), 3222.82 (22.6%), 2219.88 (15.85%) and 2472.77 Å2 (17.3%) for the amino acid stretches included in Patches 1, 2, 3 and 4, respectively (Supplementary Table S1). Based on this information, nine protein chimeras were designed as described in the Material and Methods section.
Biochemical characterization of the recombinant proteins
Ole e 15, PPIA and all protein chimeras were successfully expressed and purified from the soluble fractions of E. coli lysates (Fig. 3A,B), except the chimera lacking the Ole e 15 divergent loop (Chimera 3), which was expressed in inclusion bodies and could not be purified as a folded protein. Under non-reducing conditions, the purified proteins ran as two very close bands (Fig. 3B), as it has also been described for other cyclophilins19,26. CD spectroscopy was used to confirm a similar folding and the preservation of the structural integrity among Ole e 15, PPIA and the chimeras. All of them showed almost identical spectra, with barely observed changes at the secondary structure elements when spectra deconvolutions were performed (Fig. 3C,D).
The structure integrity of the recombinant proteins was further confirmed by ELISA experiments with an Ole e 15-specific pAb (Supplementary Fig. S3). ELISA experiments showed that all chimeras displayed a higher IgG-binding capacity than PPIA, with all of them, except Chimera 4, reaching OD492nm values highly similar to Ole e 15 (Supplementary Fig. S3a). These results were further confirmed by inhibition ELISA. All protein chimeras, except Chimera 4, reached inhibition values similar to Ole e 15 (Supplementary Fig. S3b).
Serum IgE-recognition patterns to Ole e 15 are highly diverse among olive pollen allergic patients
The IgE-binding capacity of Ole e 15, PPIA and the protein chimeras was assessed by ELISA (Fig. 4 and Supplementary Tables S2 and S3). Specific IgE-binding to Ole e 15 could be detected for the 20 used serum samples, whereas bound IgEs to PPIA could only be detected in the serum of two patients (Serum 10 and 12). Statistical analysis revealed a significant loss of IgE-recognition between Ole e 15, the protein chimeras and PPIA (Friedman test p-value lower than 0.001, mean OD for PPIA 0.05, mean ODs for protein chimeras 0.12–0.34, Supplementary Table S2). Significant differences between Ole e 15 and Chimera 1 (Dunn’s test p-value lower than 0.05), and Chimeras 8, 9, 4, 15 and 17 (Dunn’s test p-value lower than 0.001), but not significant when comparing to Chimeras 5 y 7 (Dunn’s test p-value higher than 0.05), were observed (Fig. 4).
Next, the different IgE-recognition profiles of each patient were examined. At least six different groups of patients could be distinguished according to their IgE recognition patterns (Supplementary Table S3). Importantly, all patients showed a decrease in the IgE-recognition capacity to protein chimeras compared to Ole e 15. The highest loss of IgE-recognition was mainly caused by the grafted regions on Chimera 4, and Chimeras 15 and 17 (Patterns 1, 2 and 4, 13 patients, 65%). Interestingly, some patients (Pattern 3, 3 patients, 15%) showed a higher loss against Chimeras 8 and 9, whose grafted regions correspond only to the C-terminal region of Patch 2. Other patients (Pattern 6, 2 patients, 10%) did not show a loss of IgE-recognition as high as other patients.
The loss of Ole e 15-specific IgE-binding to the grafted PPIA regions on the protein chimeras is confirmed by inhibition ELISA
The specific loss of IgE-binding capacity by the protein chimeras was further confirmed by inhibition ELISA experiments, in which Ole e 15 was coated and the chimeras and PPIA were used as inhibitors in the liquid phase. Results obtained from serum 6 and 11, for which inhibition experiments using all chimeras were performed, are shown in Fig. 5. Further results were obtained for different serum samples with representative chimeras (Supplementary Fig. S4). In all cases Ole e 15 reached inhibition values near 95–100% at 5 μg/mL, whereas values for protein chimeras were variable and serum specific (Fig. 5A and Supplementary Fig. S4), ranging from 11% to 90%. The maximum inhibition value reached by PPIA was 25% (serum 11). The obtained OD values by ELISA with serum 6 and 11 (Fig. 5B) were compared to the inhibition values. A significant (p-values lower than 0.05) and high correlation (Spearman ρ values of 0.85 and 0.78, respectively) was found (Fig. 5C).
Assessment of the IgG- and IgE-binding capacity of Ole e 15-derived peptides
Finally, to analyze the IgG- and IgE-binding to linear amino acid stretches on the surface of Ole e 15, thirteen overlapping peptides covering the entire Ole e 15 sequence were produced at the C-terminal end of 6 × His-HaloTag constructs (Supplementary Fig. S5). Linear epitope mapping of the Ole e 15-specific pAb was performed by ELISA using immobilized peptides. Regions covered by peptides 6, 7, 8 and 9 (Patch 3 and near residues), and also 12 and 13 (Patch 2, C-terminal region), were the most IgG-immunoreactive (Supplementary Fig. S6a). The IgE-binding capacity of peptides corresponding to the amino acid sequences of Patch 1 (Peptides 4 and 5), Patch 2 (Peptides 1, 2, 12 and 13) and Patch 3 (Peptides 7 and 8) was assessed by inhibition ELISA with four representative serum samples (Supplementary Fig. S6b). Little or no IgE-inhibition was achieved by the peptides, except for Peptides 4 and 5, which reached 63.1% inhibition of the serum 3 IgE-reactivity to immobilized Ole e 15.
Collectively, these results confirmed that most of the Ole e 15 IgE epitopes are non-linear conformational epitopes.
Discussion
In this study, we aimed at identifying relevant IgE-binding regions to Ole e 15 by grafting amino acids from specific surface areas of human PPIA, after confirming the lower PPIA capacity of binding Ole e 15 specific-IgEs from olive pollen allergic patients. Then, we assessed the potential loss of IgE-binding of the resulting Ole e 15-PPIA chimeras. Although similar approaches have already been used with other allergens like Bet v 137,40, Mal d 136, Ole e 138, Ves v 541 and Pen a 142, we are the first to report information on relevant IgE-binding surface areas of an allergenic plant cyclophilin.
The sequence and surface comparison between PPIA and Ole e 15 revealed that the amino acid changes between both molecules, although only comprising 21.5% and 24.6% of the Ole e 15 and PPIA total SASA, respectively, were distributed over the entire surface (Fig. 1A). Therefore, these changes could be responsible for the loss of the IgE-binding capacity of several surface areas which in Ole e 15 correspond to potential main epitopes, explaining the low seroreactivity of PPIA (Supplementary Fig. S1).
A typical conformational IgG or IgE protein epitope comprises surface areas of around 700~1000 Å2, as revealed by X-ray crystallography studies on antibody-antigen complexes34,43,44. Three main Ole e 15 surface patches were identified with areas wide enough to be epitopes, and containing most of the amino acid differences between both molecules (Fig. 1B,C, Supplementary Fig. S2 and Supplementary Table S1). Then, PPIA amino acids were grafted onto these patches, generating eight chimeric proteins, to assess the contribution of the substituted regions to the IgE-binding to Ole e 15. An essential prerequisite to obtain reliable information from the grafted areas is the conservation of an equivalent protein folding. Thus, CD spectroscopy was used to analyze the secondary structure of Ole e 15, PPIA and chimeric proteins. A highly-similar spectra and an almost equivalent proportion of secondary structure elements were found (Fig. 3). The conservation of the cyclophilin folding was also confirmed by ELISA and inhibition ELISA experiments with an Ole e 15-specific pAb (Supplementary Fig. S3). All proteins showed IgG-binding capacity, revealing common epitopes between Ole e 15 and PPIA (Supplementary Fig. S3a). Moreover, all chimeras except Chimera 4 showed OD and inhibition values equivalent to those of Ole e 15 (Supplementary Fig. S3b). These results suggested that the mutated amino acids of Chimera 4 were essential for the pAb-binding to at least one important epitope composed by amino acids between D75 to A110, as revealed by the pAb-linear epitope mapping (Supplementary Fig. S6a). The correct folding was further confirmed after SDS-PAGE under non-reducing conditions and Coomassie Blue staining, which showed that purified proteins ran as a lower band corresponding to the reduced state of the protein and a close upper band representing an oxidized form with an intramolecular disulfide bond (Fig. 3B). This bond, formed between C40 and C168 residues, which are very close in the native structure, has been shown to be part of a 2-cysteine redox mechanism controlling enzyme activity19,26.
Among the three identified surface patches with most of the amino acid changes between Ole e 15 and PPIA, the Patch 2 covered the widest SASA (3222.82 Å2), contained three defined sequence stretches (N-terminal M1 to A26, inner C-terminal Q138 to G155 and outer C-terminal G155 to S172 regions) and accumulated the highest number of amino acid changes between Ole e 15 and PPIA. Numerous studies describe that antibody-antigen interactions mainly depend on charged, polar or aromatic epitope residues with a high SASA38,45,46. Then, assuming that a high change in the SASA value or a change in the charge state of amino acids would most probably alter the potential IgE-binding to each region, only PPIA amino acids meeting a set of criteria (see Materials and Methods section) were grafted onto Ole e 15 to create Chimeras 1, 5 and 7 (Table 1 and Fig. 2). Interestingly, all serum samples showed a loss of seroreactivity against these three chimeric proteins, confirming that the mutated amino acids, very close in the 3D-structure, were part of one or more conformational IgE-binding epitopes located on Patch 2 (Fig. 2 and Supplementary Table S2). The loss of IgE-reactivity against the three chimeras was similar for some patients (Pattern 1, Supplementary Table S3), but in other cases the loss against Chimera 1 was higher (Pattern 2 patients, Supplementary Table S3), suggesting a patient-specific IgE-repertoire against Patch 2. For Pattern 1 patients, all the mutated amino acids might similarly contribute to the IgE-binding to a common conformational epitope, whereas in the case of Pattern 2 patients, the N-terminal residues might be more relevant to the IgE-binding to that epitope or be part of a different one.
Mutations at the N- and C-terminal regions were combined in Chimeras 15 and 17 to further analyze their contribution to the IgE-recognition of Patch 2. Both chimeras displayed a higher loss of IgE-reactivity than Chimeras 1, 5 and 7, and for some patients that loss was complete. These results confirmed that the mutated amino acids were part of at least one relevant epitope located on Patch 2 and surrounding areas. Moreover, the contribution of the whole C-terminal Patch 2 region (Q138 to S172) to IgE-binding was further studied using Chimeras 8 and 9. For Pattern 2 and Pattern 6 patients, the loss of seroreactivity by Chimeras 8 and 9 was similar to that caused by Chimeras 5 and 7, suggesting that the amino acid mutations of Chimeras 5 and 7 were sufficient to provoke the loss of IgE-binding. On the other hand, for Pattern 1 or Pattern 3 patients, those amino acids mutations were not sufficient, and the exclusive mutations of Chimeras 8 and 9 provoked a higher loss, which further supported the idea that these patients present a different IgE-repertoire against this region. Besides, the fact that Chimeras 8 and 9 showed a similar loss of IgE-reactivity by most patients indicated that the amino acid mutations of Chimera 8 were sufficient to lower IgE-binding.
For Chimera 4, seven amino acids were grafted from PPIA onto Ole e 15 to analyze the role of Patch 3 in IgE-binding (Table 1 and Fig. 2). Interestingly, most of the serum samples showed a reduced IgE-binding capacity to this chimera compared to Ole e 15, suggesting this region was part of a relevant epitope. The sequence belonging to this patch, which contains the amino acids of the regulatory catalytic loop26, had the highest relative SASA per amino acid (Supplementary Table S1). Besides, five of the seven mutated amino acids in this region met the criteria on changes in the SASA value and charge state. Thus, the number and nature of these amino acid changes might explain why the IgE-reactivity of Chimera 4 was also the lowest of all the chimeras.
Several IgE-binding studies of Bet v 136,37, Der p 247,48 and other allergens49,50 have revealed that the allergen-specific IgE-repertoire can be very complex in terms of IgE-clonality, affinity and concentration. Besides, it is well-known that these parameters affect effector cell degranulation, which is only triggered in the presence of at least two IgE-clones binding non-overlapping epitopes on the allergen surface51. This is consistent with our results, where at least six different serum recognition patterns against the chimeric proteins could be identified and all patients lost IgE-recognition to a different extent when amino acids from Patch 2 and Patch 3, belonging to at least two different epitopes, were mutated. Interestingly, it has been proposed that every region of the solvent exposed surface of a protein can be potentially immunogenic and then, part of a B-cell epitope, although some epitopes are more recognized than others52,53. In fact, a recent study showed that 20 out of 64 Bet v 1-allergic patients tested presented IgEs against at least four well-defined regions on the Bet v 1 surface after they were grafted onto the homologous low IgE-binding allergen Api g 137.
Other two patches on the surface of Ole e 15 (Patch 1 and Patch 4, Fig. 1 and Supplementary Fig. S2) with sufficient areas to contain potential epitopes were identified. Regarding Patch 1, an Ole e 15 mutant lacking the divergent loop amino acid sequence was designed (Table 1), but it could not be produced as a folded protein. However, in a previous study in which an equivalent Cat r 1 mutant could be produced, no loss of its IgE-binding capacity could be detected17. Here, after using two peptides containing the loop sequence and surrounding residues as solution inhibitors by ELISA, we only observed high inhibition values in one of the four serum samples tested (Supplementary Fig. S6b). Interestingly, this patient did not show a high reduction of the IgE-reactivity compared to other patients (recognition pattern 6), so Patch 1 residues might be part of a relevant IgE-binding region for some patients. Other peptides were also used to analyze the potential contribution of sequential amino acid stretches in Patch 2 and Patch 3, but no important inhibition values were reached, further suggesting that the amino acids of these regions were part of conformational epitopes. Nevertheless, the use of peptides gives limited information on the IgE-binding capacity of the represented regions, as they do not usually display the real topological structure of the native protein surface31,53. Thus, the contribution of sequential stretches to the IgE-binding to these regions cannot be fully discarded, and further studies should be performed to determine whether Patch 1 is a region containing amino acids belonging to a main epitope for olive pollen allergic patients.
The IgE-mediated cross-reactivity between allergens sharing high sequence identity with their human counterparts has been described for proteins like the pan-allergens profilins or the fungal allergens manganese superoxide dismutase, acidic ribosomal P2 protein and thioredoxin54. This cross-reactivity has also been demonstrated in vitro and in vivo between the fungal cyclophilins Mala s 6 and Asp f 11 and PPIA and PPIB, and seem to be especially relevant in patients suffering from allergic bronchopulmonary aspergillosis19. Here, only two patients showed IgE-reactivity against PPIA by ELISA, and very low inhibition values were reached using PPIA as inhibitor, revealing a weak in vitro cross-reactivity between Ole e 15 and PPIA among olive pollen allergic patients. Interestingly, the protein regions predicted in silico as the main epitopes accounting for this interspecies cross-reactivity belong to the active site region39. In Ole e 15, these regions are part of the Patch 4. Hence, the weak Ole e 15-PPIA cross-reactivity might be explained by the presence of IgE antibodies in low levels or with low affinity or clonality against this region. Nevertheless, it has been proven that the presence in the IgE-repertoire of only two non-overlapping allergen-specific antibodies, one with high affinity and another with very low affinity, is sufficient to produce functional high affinity IgE receptor (FcɛRI)/IgE/allergen complexes on the surface of effector cells51. Then, this in vitro cross reactivity, although weak, might be clinically relevant, and further studies to address it by in vivo experiments and to confirm the role of Patch 4 as an IgE-binding region should be performed.
The identification of relevant IgE epitopes on the surface of allergens gives fundamental information about the generation of the IgE-repertoire by allergic patients and allows for a better prediction of cross-reactivity between allergens by using epitope sequence similarity rather than whole allergen sequence53. Besides, it is important for the design of hypoallergenic variants with low capacity of effector cell activation for allergen-specific immunotherapy31,55. Here, Chimeras 15, 17 and 4 displayed a very reduced IgE-binding capacity compared to Ole e 15 and their suitability as hypoallergenic variants should be addressed by basophil activation tests and T-cell reactivity experiments.
Conclusion
In summary, this study shows that there is a weak but relevant in vitro cross-reactivity between PPIA and Ole e 15 and that the Ole e 15-specific IgE-response is highly polyclonal and patient specific. Two main IgE-binding regions on the surface of Ole e 15 have been identified after the immunological characterization of eight Ole e 15-PPIA chimeras displaying lower IgE-binding capacities than Ole e 15. Thus, we demonstrate that grafting specific areas from a low IgE-binding homolog like PPIA is useful to identify the main IgE-binding sites of an allergen.
Materials and Methods
Patients and control subjects
Twenty sera from olive pollen allergic patients obtained by standard operating procedures from two different Spanish populations (Córdoba and Madrid) were used according to their positive olive pollen skin prick test (SPT), presence of IgE antibodies against olive pollen extract as measured by ImmunoCAP 250 (Thermo Scientific, Uppsala, Sweden) or ELISA, and presence of specific IgE against recombinant Ole e 15 (Ole e 15) as determined by ELISA. SPT was performed according to standard procedures. A wheal diameter lower than 3 mm was considered negative. Values higher than 0.35 kU/L by ImmunoCAP, or higher than 0.1 optical density at 492 nm (OD492 nm, arbitrary units) by ELISA were considered positive. All patients included in this study reported an immediate IgE-mediated allergic reaction and a positive SPT with olive pollen.
The Institutional Ethical Review Boards of the Complutense University of Madrid, ISCIII (CEI PI 49) and Reina Sofia University Hospital (ref. 3033) approved this study involving allergic patients. All samples were handled anonymously according to the ethical and legal guidelines of the Complutense University of Madrid and Reina Sofia University Hospital after approval of the Ethical Review Boards of these institutions. All subjects in the study gave their written informed consent to participate and all experiments were performed in accordance with relevant guidelines and regulations. All patients presented asthma or rhinoconjunctivitis. Detailed demographic and clinical information of the olive pollen allergic patients is depicted in Supplementary Table S4. Three non-atopic subjects were used as controls.
Ole e 15 and PPIA structure comparison and design of Ole e 15-PPIA chimeras
A three-dimensional (3D)-model of Ole e 15 was obtained with the ExPASy homology-modelling server Swiss-Model56 using the NMR solution ligand-free structure of the allergenic plant cyclophilin Cat r 1 as template (PDB: 2mc9, 86% sequence identity and 92% similarity with Ole e 15). For PPIA, the NMR solution structure (PDB: 1OCA) was used. Three-dimensional structures were visualized using PyMOL 2.3 (Schrödinger, LCC, New York) and amino acid sequences were aligned using Clustal Omega57. Sequence and structure comparison allowed for the identification of four main surface patches gathering most of the different (Patches 1, 2 and 3) or the conserved (Patch 4) amino acids between Ole e 15 and PPIA (see Figs 1 and 2, and Supplementary Fig. S2). Then, solvent-accessible surface areas (SASAs) per residue from both molecules were calculated using Parameter OPtimized Surfaces (POPS)58, and the SASAs of the changing amino acids were compared. All protein chimeras were created by grafting amino acids from PPIA onto Ole e 15. Amino acid pairs belonging to Patch 2, and meeting the following criteria, were considered for grafting in the case of Chimeras 1, 5 and 7: a change of SASA value higher than 30 Å2, or a change of SASA value higher than 10 Å2 but with a change in the potential charge state of the amino acid (Table 1, Fig. 2, and Supplementary Table S1). Thus, Chimera 1 was designed by mutating three amino acids in the Patch 2 N-terminal region (M1 to A26), and Chimeras 5 and 7, by mutating four amino acids in the Patch 2 inner C-terminal region (Q138 to G155) and three amino acids in the Patch 2 outer C -terminal region (G155 to S172), respectively. Chimeras 15 and 17 were designed as a combination of the mutations in Chimeras 1 and 5, and Chimeras 1 and 7. For the rest of the chimeras, the above criteria were not applied. Chimera 4 was designed by changing all the corresponding amino acids in Patch 3; Chimera 8, all amino acids in the Patch 2 inner C-terminal region; and Chimera 9, all amino acids in the Patch 2 (inner C-terminal and outer C-terminal regions, Q138 to S172). A deletion mutant (Chimera 3) was also designed by removing the amino acids of the Ole e 15 divergent loop (K48 to H54 in Patch 1). All amino acid changes are summarized in Table 1.
Cloning, expression and purification of recombinant proteins
Overlapping oligonucleotides were designed to generate the chimera-coding DNA fragments by PCR amplification. pET28a-derived expression vectors containing Ole e 15 and PPIA-coding sequences were used as templates. The obtained fragments were later assembled into expression vectors using NEBuilder HiFi DNA Assembly Mix (New England Biolabs, USA). Thirteen peptides of twenty four amino acids in length and with twelve amino acid overlaps covering the entire Ole e 15 amino acid sequence were also designed (Supplementary Fig. S5). Each DNA insert with the peptide coding sequence was generated by PCR-amplification of attB-site containing oligonucleotides overlapping by twenty nucleotides. Then, each insert was simultaneously cloned into pDONR221 and pDEST-HisHALO as donor and destination (expression) vectors, respectively, using single-step combined BP/LR Gateway reactions (Thermo Fisher Scientific, Waltham, MA, US)59. Oligonucleotides were purchased from Sigma-Aldrich (St.Louis, MO, US) (Supplementary Table S5). A random peptide (control peptide) with the sequence HGRIKQVCTKKQASSGVMLGDPNS was used as control.
Ole e 15, PPIA, protein chimeras and HaloTag-fused peptides were recombinantly produced in E. coli as N-terminal His6-tagged proteins. The pET28a/pDEST-HisHALO expression constructs were used to transform BL21 (DE3) E. coli cells. LB cultures of 10 mL with 30 μg/mL kanamycin containing the transformed cells were grown overnight and then, diluted ten times and grown until OD600nm reached 0.7. Finally, protein expression was induced with 0.4 mM isopropyl thio-β-D-thiogalactoside (IPTG) and grown at 37 °C 230 rpm four hours (for HaloTag-fused peptides 1 to 11, 13 and control peptide), 30 °C 230 rpm for sixteen hours (for Ole e 15, PPIA and Chimeras 1, 5, 7, 8, 15, 17), or at 16 °C 230 rpm for forty eight hours (for Chimeras 4 and 9, and HaloTag-fused peptide 12). Then, the cultures were centrifuged at 6,000 × g for twenty minutes at 4 °C. Proteins were purified by gravity-flow chromatography from the soluble fraction of cell lysates using Ni-NTA agarose (Qiagen, Hilden, Germany) following the manufacturer instructions with minor modifications. Briefly, cell pellets corresponding to 250 or 500 mL E. coli cultures were resuspended in 10 mL lysis buffer (300 mM NaCl, 1 mM PMSF, 50 mM phosphate buffer pH 7.0), distributed in 1 mL aliquots and disrupted by five cycles of subsequent freezing in liquid N2 for forty seconds and thawing at 42 °C in a water bath. Then, soluble fractions obtained by centrifugation at 6,000 × g for twenty minutes at 4 °C were incubated sixteen hours at 4 °C in a 15 mL conical centrifuge tubes with 500 μL Ni-NTA agarose previously pre-incubated three times with 5 mL lysis buffer for two minutes. After that, Ni-NTA agarose was washed five times for ten minutes at 4 °C with 5 mL wash buffer (10 mM imidazole, 300 mM NaCl, 50 mM phosphate buffer pH 7.0), recovering each time the resin by centrifugation at 4,000 × g for ten minutes at 4 °C. Proteins were then eluted with 5 mL elution buffer (250 mM imidazole, 300 mM NaCl, 50 mM phosphate buffer pH 7.0) for twenty minutes at 4 °C on rotation. To avoid the presence of traces of Ni-NTA agarose in the eluted fractions, a final centrifugation step was performed at 12,000 × g for five minutes at 4 °C. Finally, purified proteins were desalted onto PD10 desalting columns (GE Healthcare, Chicago, IL, US) with 150 mM ammonium bicarbonate, quantified, aliquoted, lyophilized and stored at −20 °C until use.
Analytical methods, antibodies and physicochemical analysis
Purity of the recombinant proteins was analyzed by 15% SDS-PAGE and subsequent staining with Coomassie Blue R-250 (Sigma-Aldrich, St.Louis, MO, US). Theoretical molecular mass calculations were performed using unstained protein biomarkers SM0431 (Fermentas, Waltham, MA, US).
The rabbit polyclonal antiserum against Ole e 15 (Ole e 15-specific pAb) was previously obtained8.
Circular dichroism (CD) spectra of Ole e 15, PPIA and protein chimeras in 20 mM phosphate buffer pH 7.0, at 0.2 mg/mL and 20 °C were recorded in the far-UV (190–260 nm) on a J-715 spectropolarimeter (JASCO, Japan Spectroscopic Co., Tokyo, Japan) using a 0.1 cm optical-path quartz cuvette. The deconvolution of the obtained spectra was performed using the CDNN software (thirty three reference net spectra, complex CD spectrum). Finally, the obtained far UV spectra were baseline-subtracted and represented as mean residue molecular ellipticity.
Protein concentration of purified Ole e 15, PPIA and protein chimeras was calculated after amino acid analysis of 14 μg purified proteins in duplicates with a BioChrom 30 Amino Acid analyzer (Harvard Bioscience, Inc., Holliston, MA, US). Protein concentration of the purified HaloTag-fused peptides was calculated by measuring the absorbance at 280 nm using a DU-7 spectrometer (Beckman, Barcelona, Spain) after theoretical extinction coefficient calculation with the ProtParam tool from ExPASy.
IgE and Ole e 15-specific pAb ELISA experiments
To detect IgE-binding by ELISA, high-binding microplates (Costar, Corning, New York, US) were coated overnight at 4 °C with 50 μL/well of 10 μg/mL Ole e 15, PPIA and protein chimeras in phosphate-buffered saline (PBS). After washing four times with 0.5% Tween 20-PBS, non-specific binding sites were blocked at 37 °C one hour with 100 μL/well 3% skimmed milk 0.1% Tween-PBS (blocking buffer). Then, 50 μL/well sera ten-fold diluted in blocking buffer were incubated in duplicate at 37 °C for two hours. After washing, bound IgEs were detected by incubating 50 μL/well 103-fold blocking buffer-diluted horseradish-peroxidase-conjugated mouse anti-human IgE mAb (Southern Biotech, Birmingham, AL, US) one hour at 37 °C. Color was developed for thirty minutes with o-phenylenediamine chloride and H2O2 as substrates (Merck, Darmstadt, Germany), and the reaction was stopped with 1 N H2SO4. Absorbance was measured at 492 nm. Incubation with three sera from non-atopic individuals, and incubation with blocking buffer instead of serum (background), were used as controls of the assay. Normalized OD values (sample OD492nm-background) were considered positive when the cut-off absorbance value was higher than 0.1 (exceeding always the mean background by 3 SDs). For Ole e 15-specific pAb-ELISAs, plates were coated with 100 μL/well of 1 μg/mL proteins or 5 μg/mL fusion-peptides, in PBS. For Ole e 15, PPIA and protein chimeras titration curves, each well was incubated with 100 μL serial dilutions (from 104 to 3 × 104-fold) of Ole e 15-specific pAb in blocking buffer at 37 °C for one hour. To assess the recognition of the HaloTag fused-peptides, the antibody was 2.5 × 103-fold diluted. Specific IgG-binding was detected using a horseradish peroxidase-labeled goat polyclonal antibody against rabbit IgG (Bio-Rad, Richmond, CA, USA).
Inhibition ELISAs
For all inhibition ELISAs, procedures like coating, blocking and color development were performed as described above. For IgE-inhibition with Ole e 15, PPIA and chimeras, diluted sera (seven point five to twenty five-fold) were preincubated in duplicate for two hours at room temperature with ten-fold serial dilutions, from 0.005 to 5 μg/mL, or alternatively, 0.001 to 1 μg/mL, of the inhibitor proteins. For IgE-inhibition with HaloTag-fused peptides, diluted sera (fifteen to twenty five-fold) were preincubated with each peptide at 2 μM concentration.
Inhibition values were calculated with the following formula:
Statistical analysis
The Friedman test and the Dunn’s post test (95% Confidence Interval (CI)) were performed to analyze whether the reduction of the IgE-recognition capacity of each serum against protein chimeras and PPIA in comparison to Ole e 15, was significant. Moreover, the relationship between the OD492nm values obtained by ELISA and the inhibition experiments was analyzed using Spearman correlation (95% CI).
Data availability
The data are available as supplementary information.
References
Calderón, M. A. et al. Respiratory allergy caused by house dust mites: What do we really know? Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology 136, 38–48, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jaci.2014.10.012 (2015).
Davies, J. M. Grass pollen allergens globally: the contribution of subtropical grasses to burden of allergic respiratory diseases. Clinical and experimental allergy: journal of the British Society for Allergy and Clinical Immunology 44, 790–801, https://doi.org/10.1111/cea.12317 (2014).
Liccardi, G., D’Amato, M. & D’Amato, G. Oleaceae pollinosis: a review. International archives of allergy and immunology 111, 210–217, https://doi.org/10.1159/000237370 (1996).
Torres, M. et al. Olive Cultivation in the Southern Hemisphere: Flowering, Water Requirements and Oil Quality Responses to New Crop Environments. Front Plant Sci 8, 1830, https://doi.org/10.3389/fpls.2017.01830 (2017).
Villalba, M., Rodríguez, R. & Batanero, E. The spectrum of olive pollen allergens. From structures to diagnosis and treatment. Methods 66, 44–54, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ymeth.2013.07.038 (2014).
Oeo-Santos, C. et al. A Hypoallergenic Polygalacturonase Isoform from Olive Pollen Is Implicated in Pollen-Pollen Cross-Reactivity. International archives of allergy and immunology 177, 290–301, https://doi.org/10.1159/000491027 (2018).
Jimenez-Lopez, J. C. et al. Ole e 13 is the unique food allergen in olive: Structure-functional, substrates docking, and molecular allergenicity comparative analysis. J Mol Graph Model 66, 26–40, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jmgm.2016.03.003 (2016).
San Segundo-Acosta, P. et al. Delineation of the Olive Pollen Proteome and Its Allergenome Unmasks Cyclophilin as a Relevant Cross-Reactive Allergen. Journal of Proteome Research. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.jproteome.9b00167 (2019).
Barik, S. Immunophilins: for the love of proteins. Cell Mol Life Sci 63, 2889–2900, https://doi.org/10.1007/s00018-006-6215-3 (2006).
Wang, P. & Heitman, J. The cyclophilins. Genome biology 6, 226, https://doi.org/10.1186/gb-2005-6-7-226 (2005).
An, S. et al. Dermatophagoides farinae allergens diversity identification by proteomics. Mol Cell Proteomics 12, 1818–1828, https://doi.org/10.1074/mcp.M112.027136 (2013).
Glaser, A. G. et al. Analysis of the cross-reactivity and of the 1.5 Å crystal structure of the <em>Malassezia sympodialis</em> Mala s 6 allergen, a member of the cyclophilin pan-allergen family. Biochemical Journal 396, 41–49, https://doi.org/10.1042/bj20051708 (2006).
Fluckiger, S., Fijten, H., Whitley, P., Blaser, K. & Crameri, R. Cyclophilins, a new family of cross-reactive allergens. European journal of immunology 32, 10–17, doi:10.1002/1521-4141(200201)32:1<10::AID-IMMU10>3.0.CO;2-I (2002).
Horner, W. E., Reese, G. & Lehrer, S. B. Identification of the allergen Psi c 2 from the basidiomycete Psilocybe cubensis as a fungal cyclophilin. International archives of allergy and immunology 107, 298–300, https://doi.org/10.1159/000237007 (1995).
Welter, S. et al. Pepino mosaic virus infection of tomato affects allergen expression, but not the allergenic potential of fruits. PLoS One 8, e65116, https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0065116 (2013).
Cadot, P. et al. Purification and characterization of an 18-kd allergen of birch (Betula verrucosa) pollen: identification as a cyclophilin. The Journal of allergy and clinical immunology 105, 286–291 (2000).
Ghosh, D. et al. Primary identification, biochemical characterization, and immunologic properties of the allergenic pollen cyclophilin cat R 1. J Biol Chem 289, 21374–21385, https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M114.559971 (2014).
Glaser, A. G. et al. Analysis of the cross-reactivity and of the 1.5 A crystal structure of the Malassezia sympodialis Mala s 6 allergen, a member of the cyclophilin pan-allergen family. Biochem J 396, 41–49, https://doi.org/10.1042/bj20051708 (2006).
Limacher, A. et al. The crystal structure of Aspergillus fumigatus cyclophilin reveals 3D domain swapping of a central element. Structure 14, 185–195, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.str.2005.10.015 (2006).
Dornan, J. et al. Biochemical and structural characterization of a divergent loop cyclophilin from Caenorhabditis elegans. J Biol Chem 274, 34877–34883, https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.274.49.34877 (1999).
Cadot, P., Nelles, L., Srahna, M., Dilissen, E. & Ceuppens, J. L. Cloning and expression of the cyclophilin Bet v 7, and analysis of immunological cross-reactivity among the cyclophilin A family. Molecular immunology 43, 226–235, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.molimm.2005.02.001 (2006).
Chan, S. L., Ong, S. T., Ong, S. Y., Chew, F. T. & Mok, Y. K. Nuclear magnetic resonance structure-based epitope mapping and modulation of dust mite group 13 allergen as a hypoallergen. Journal of immunology (Baltimore, Md.: 1950) 176, 4852–4860 (2006).
Chen, X. et al. Conformational IgE epitopes of peanut allergens Ara h 2 and Ara h 6. Clinical and experimental allergy: journal of the British Society for Allergy and Clinical Immunology 46, 1120–1128, https://doi.org/10.1111/cea.12764 (2016).
Ke, H. M., Zydowsky, L. D., Liu, J. & Walsh, C. T. Crystal structure of recombinant human T-cell cyclophilin A at 2.5 A resolution. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 88, 9483–9487, https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.88.21.9483 (1991).
Fluckiger, S. et al. Comparison of the crystal structures of the human manganese superoxide dismutase and the homologous Aspergillus fumigatus allergen at 2-A resolution. Journal of immunology (Baltimore, Md.: 1950) 168, 1267–1272 (2002).
Campos, B. M. et al. A redox 2-Cys mechanism regulates the catalytic activity of divergent cyclophilins. Plant Physiol 162, 1311–1323, https://doi.org/10.1104/pp.113.218339 (2013).
Sekhon, S. S. et al. Structural and biochemical characterization of the cytosolic wheat cyclophilin TaCypA-1. Acta Crystallogr D Biol Crystallogr 69, 555–563, https://doi.org/10.1107/s0907444912051529 (2013).
Vrtala, S. et al. Conversion of the major birch pollen allergen, Bet v 1, into two nonanaphylactic T cell epitope-containing fragments: candidates for a novel form of specific immunotherapy. J Clin Invest 99, 1673–1681, https://doi.org/10.1172/jci119330 (1997).
Gonzalez, E. M. et al. Analysis of IgE and IgG B-cell immunodominant regions of Ole e 1, the main allergen from olive pollen. Molecular immunology 43, 570–578, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.molimm.2005.04.015 (2006).
Curin, M. et al. Clustering of conformational IgE epitopes on the major dog allergen Can f 1. Sci Rep 7, 12135, https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-017-11672-5 (2017).
Sircar, G., Jana, K., Dasgupta, A., Saha, S. & Gupta Bhattacharya, S. Epitope Mapping of Rhi o 1 and Generation of a Hypoallergenic Variant: A candidate molecule for fungal allergy vaccines. J Biol Chem 291, 18016–18029, https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M116.732032 (2016).
Razzera, G. et al. Mapping the interactions between a major pollen allergen and human IgE antibodies. Structure 18, 1011–1021, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.str.2010.05.012 (2010).
Niemi, M. et al. Molecular interactions between a recombinant IgE antibody and the beta-lactoglobulin allergen. Structure (London, England: 1993) 15, 1413–1421, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.str.2007.09.012 (2007).
Padavattan, S. et al. High-affinity IgE recognition of a conformational epitope of the major respiratory allergen Phl p 2 as revealed by X-ray crystallography. Journal of immunology (Baltimore, Md.: 1950) 182, 2141–2151, https://doi.org/10.4049/jimmunol.0803018 (2009).
Ferreira, F. et al. Modulation of IgE reactivity of allergens by site-directed mutagenesis: potential use of hypoallergenic variants for immunotherapy. FASEB journal: official publication of the Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology 12, 231–242, https://doi.org/10.1096/fasebj.12.2.231 (1998).
Holm, J. et al. Epitope grafting, re-creating a conformational Bet v 1 antibody epitope on the surface of the homologous apple allergen Mal d 1. J Biol Chem 286, 17569–17578, https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M110.194878 (2011).
Gepp, B. et al. Chimeras of Bet v 1 and Api g 1 reveal heterogeneous IgE responses in patients with birch pollen allergy. The Journal of allergy and clinical immunology 134, 188–194, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jaci.2013.12.1073 (2014).
Marazuela, E. G. et al. A non-allergenic Ole e 1-like protein from birch pollen as a tool to design hypoallergenic vaccine candidates. Molecular immunology 50, 83–90, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.molimm.2011.12.006 (2012).
Roy, D., Ghosh, D. & Gupta-Bhattacharya, S. Homology modeling of allergenic cyclophilins: IgE-binding site and structural basis of cross-reactivity. Biochem Biophys Res Commun 307, 422–429 (2003).
Klinglmayr, E. et al. Identification of B-cell epitopes of Bet v 1 involved in cross-reactivity with food allergens. Allergy 64, 647–651, https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1398-9995.2008.01844.x (2009).
King, T. P. et al. Recombinant allergens with reduced allergenicity but retaining immunogenicity of the natural allergens: hybrids of yellow jacket and paper wasp venom allergen antigen 5s. Journal of immunology (Baltimore, Md.: 1950) 166, 6057–6065, https://doi.org/10.4049/jimmunol.166.10.6057 (2001).
Albrecht, M. et al. Relevance of IgE binding to short peptides for the allergenic activity of food allergens. The Journal of allergy and clinical immunology 124, 328–336, 336.e321–326, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jaci.2009.05.031 (2009).
Braden, B. C. et al. Structure and thermodynamics of antigen recognition by antibodies. Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences 764, 315–327 (1995).
Davies, D. R., Padlan, E. A. & Sheriff, S. Antibody-antigen complexes. Annual review of biochemistry 59, 439–473, https://doi.org/10.1146/annurev.bi.59.070190.002255 (1990).
Novotny, J. et al. Antigenic determinants in proteins coincide with surface regions accessible to large probes (antibody domains). Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 83, 226–230, https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.83.2.226 (1986).
Thornton, J. M., Edwards, M. S., Taylor, W. R. & Barlow, D. J. Location of ‘continuous’ antigenic determinants in the protruding regions of proteins. The EMBO journal 5, 409–413 (1986).
Willumsen, N., Holm, J., Christensen, L. H., Wurtzen, P. A. & Lund, K. The complexity of allergic patients’ IgE repertoire correlates with serum concentration of allergen-specific IgE. Clinical and experimental allergy: journal of the British Society for Allergy and Clinical Immunology 42, 1227–1236, https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2222.2012.04009.x (2012).
Reginald, K. & Chew, F. T. Conformational IgE Epitope Mapping of Der p 2 and the Evaluations of Two Candidate Hypoallergens for Immunotherapy. Scientific Reports 8, 3391, https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-018-21792-1 (2018).
Pang, S. L. et al. Crystal structure and epitope analysis of house dust mite allergen Der f 21. Scientific Reports 9, 4933, https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-019-40879-x (2019).
Hansen, C. S. et al. Linear epitope mapping of peanut allergens demonstrates individualized and persistent antibody-binding patterns. Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology 138, 1728–1730, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jaci.2016.06.019 (2016).
Christensen, L. H., Holm, J., Lund, G., Riise, E. & Lund, K. Several distinct properties of the IgE repertoire determine effector cell degranulation in response to allergen challenge. The Journal of allergy and clinical immunology 122, 298–304, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jaci.2008.05.026 (2008).
Benjamin, D. C. et al. The antigenic structure of proteins: a reappraisal. Annual review of immunology 2, 67–101, https://doi.org/10.1146/annurev.iy.02.040184.000435 (1984).
Aalberse, R. C. & Crameri, R. IgE-binding epitopes: a reappraisal. Allergy 66, 1261–1274, https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1398-9995.2011.02656.x (2011).
Valenta, R. et al. Autoallergy: A pathogenetic factor in atopic dermatitis? Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology 105, 432–437, https://doi.org/10.1067/mai.2000.104783 (2000).
Jutel, M. & Akdis, C. A. Immunological mechanisms of allergen-specific immunotherapy. Allergy 66, 725–732, https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1398-9995.2011.02589.x (2011).
Waterhouse, A. et al. SWISS-MODEL: homology modelling of protein structures and complexes. Nucleic Acids Research 46, W296–W303, https://doi.org/10.1093/nar/gky427 (2018).
Madeira, F. et al. The EMBL-EBI search and sequence analysis tools APIs in 2019. Nucleic acids research. https://doi.org/10.1093/nar/gkz268 (2019).
Cavallo, L., Kleinjung, J. & Fraternali, F. POPS: a fast algorithm for solvent accessible surface areas at atomic and residue level. Nucleic Acids Research 31, 3364–3366, https://doi.org/10.1093/nar/gkg601 (2003).
Liang, X., Peng, L., Baek, C. H. & Katzen, F. Single step BP/LR combined Gateway reactions. BioTechniques 55, 265–268, https://doi.org/10.2144/000114101 (2013).
Acknowledgements
We thank the excellent technical support of Sara Abián Saz. This work was supported by grants cofounded by Fondo Europeo de Desarrollo Regional (FEDER): SAF2014-53209-R to M.V. and R.B. and SAF2017-86483-R to M.V. from the Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad and by the Thematic Networks and Co-operative Research Centres: RIRAAF Network RD12/0013/0015; and ARADyAL (RD16/0006/0014) from the Instituto de Salud Carlos III (ISCIII). A.N. and A.J. acknowledge PI-01119-2016 from the Consejería de Salud (Junta de Andalucía) and the Alergosur Foundation. R.B. also acknowledges the financial support of the PI17CIII/00045 grant from the AES-ISCIII program. The FPU predoctoral contract to P.S.S.-A. is supported by the Spanish Ministerio de Educación, Cultura y Deporte. C.O.-S. was supported by a contract of the Programa Operativo de Empleo Juvenil y la Iniciativa de Empleo Juvenil (YEI) with the participation of the Consejería de Educación, Juventud y Deporte de la Comunidad de Madrid y del Fondo Social Europeo.
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Contributions
Conception and design: P.S.S.-A., R.B. Development of methodology: P.S.S-A., C.O.-S., M.V., R.B. Perform Research: P.S.S.-A., C.O.-S., A.N. Analysis and interpretation of data: P.S.S.-A., C.O.-S., M.V., R.B. Writing, review, and/or revision of the manuscript: P.S.S.-A., C.O.-S., A.N., A.J., M.V., R.B. Technical, obtaining and processing of samples, or material support: A.N., A.J., M.V., R.B.
Corresponding author
Ethics declarations
Competing interests
The authors declare no competing interests.
Additional information
Publisher’s note Springer Nature remains neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations.
Supplementary information
Rights and permissions
Open Access This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License, which permits use, sharing, adaptation, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, as long as you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made. The images or other third party material in this article are included in the article’s Creative Commons license, unless indicated otherwise in a credit line to the material. If material is not included in the article’s Creative Commons license and your intended use is not permitted by statutory regulation or exceeds the permitted use, you will need to obtain permission directly from the copyright holder. To view a copy of this license, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/.
About this article
Cite this article
San Segundo-Acosta, P., Oeo-Santos, C., Navas, A. et al. Ole e 15 and its human counterpart -PPIA- chimeras reveal an heterogeneous IgE response in olive pollen allergic patients. Sci Rep 9, 15027 (2019). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-019-51005-2
Received:
Accepted:
Published:
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-019-51005-2
- Springer Nature Limited
This article is cited by
-
Cyclophilins and gibberellin-regulated proteins in IgE-mediated allergic diseases
Allergo Journal International (2023)