Antibodies against Phl p 1 and Phl p 5 can be used as a marker of allergy to grasses in adult patients. Children reacted exclusively to minor allergens more frequently than adults. Prolonged allergen exposure is evidently necessary to induce sensitization to Phl p 5. A high level of homology between profilins and calcium-binding proteins enables only one allergen to be used for diagnostic purposes but a possibility of a reaction to species-bound epitopes should be taken into account.
Background: Birch pollen belongs to the major allergen triggers in the spring season in Europe. Our rapidly expanding knowledge of the allergenic molecules enables us to better recognize the individual differences between the reactivity of specific IgE antibodies of individual patients and allergic populations living in various regions of the world. Method: In a group of birch pollen-allergic patients living in the Czech Republic (107 children, 71 adults) we detected the presence of Bet v1, Bet v2 and Bet v4 specific IgE antibodies. Results: Bet v1 specific IgE antibodies were identified in most patients without any significant differences between children and adults. Bet v2 positivity was found more frequently in the group of children than in adults (p = 0.02). In most adult patients Bet v1 monospecificity was more expressed as compared to the pediatric group. More allergic subjects reacted against minor birch allergens in the pediatric group (p = 0.02). Specific IgE antibodies against Bet v1 were not detected in 10% of the tested patients. In this group, 5% of birch pollen-allergic patients were found to not have specific IgE antibodies against any of the tested recombinant allergens. Conclusion: The investigation of specific IgE antibodies against Bet v1, Bet v2 and Bet v4 demonstrated that the specificity of allergen-induced IgE antibodies in birch pollen-allergic individuals is dependent not only on the region in which a patient lives but also on age. Especially in children, there is an increase in the number of allergic subjects who do not react exclusively against the major allergen. The question is whether some allergen-specific IgE antibodies will disappear depending on age or on the contrary whether their synthesis will be increased.
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