Synthetic Allergen Design Reveals The Significance of Moderate Affinity Epitopes in Mast Cell Degranulation

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2012
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English
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Abstract

This study describes the design of a well-defined homotetravalent synthetic allergen (HTA) system to investigate the effect of hapten–IgE interactions on mast cell degranulation. A library of DNP variants with varying affinities for IgEDNP was generated (Kd from 8.1 nM to 9.2 μM), and 8 HTAs spanning this range were synthesized via conjugation of each DNP variant to the tetravalent scaffold. HTAs with hapten Kd < 235 nM stimulated degranulation following a bell-shaped dose response curve with maximum response occurring near the hapten Kd. HTAs with hapten Kd ≥ 235 nM failed to stimulate degranulation. To mimic physiological conditions, the percent of allergen specific IgE on cell surface was varied, and maximum degranulation occurred at 25% IgEDNP. These results demonstrated that moderate hapten–IgE affinities are sufficient to trigger mast cell degranulation. Moreover, this study established the HTA design as a well-defined, controllable, and physiologically relevant experimental system to elucidate the mast cell degranulation mechanism.

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Handlogten, M. W., Kiziltepe, T., Alves, N. J., & Bilgicer, B. (2012). Synthetic allergen design reveals the significance of moderate affinity epitopes in mast cell degranulation. ACS chemical biology, 7(11), 1796-1801. http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/cb300193f
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