Binding to Iron Quercetin Complexes Increases the Antioxidant Capacity of the Major Birch Pollen Allergen Bet v 1 and Reduces Its Allergenicity
Regner, Andreas; Szepannek, Nathalie; Wiederstein, Markus; Fakhimahmadi, Aila; Paciosis, Luis F.; Blokhuis, Bart R.; Redegeld, Frank A.; Hofstetter, Gerlinde; Dvorak, Zdenek; Jensen-Jarolim, Erika; Hufnagl, Karin; Roth-Walter, Franziska
(2023) Antioxidants, volume 12, issue 1
(Article)
Abstract
Bet v 1 is the major allergen in birch pollen to which up to 95% of patients sensitized to birch respond. As a member of the pathogenesis-related PR 10 family, its natural function is implicated in plant defense, with a member of the PR10 family being reported to be upregulated
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under iron deficiency. As such, we assessed the function of Bet v 1 to sequester iron and its immunomodulatory properties on human immune cells. Binding of Bet v 1 to iron quercetin complexes FeQ2 was determined in docking calculations and by spectroscopy. Serum IgE-binding to Bet v 1 with (holoBet v1) and without ligands (apoBet v 1) were assessed by ELISA, blocking experiments and Western Blot. Crosslinking-capacity of apo/holoBet v 1 were assessed on human mast cells and Arylhydrocarbon receptor (AhR) activation with the human reporter cellline AZ-AHR. Human PBMCs were stimulated and assessed for labile iron and phenotypic changes by flow cytometry. Bet v 1 bound to FeQ2 strongly with calculated Kd values of 1 nm surpassing affinities to quercetin alone nearly by a factor of 1000. Binding to FeQ2 masked IgE epitopes and decreased IgE binding up to 80% and impaired degranulation of sensitized human mast cells. Bet v 1 facilitated the shuttling of quercetin, which activated the anti-inflammatory AhR pathway and increased the labile iron pool of human monocytic cells. The increase of labile iron was associated with an anti-inflammatory phenotype in CD14+monocytes and downregulation of HLADR. To summarize, we reveal for the first time that FeQ2 binding reduces the allergenicity of Bet v 1 due to ligand masking, but also actively contributes anti-inflammatory stimuli to human monocytes, thereby fostering tolerance. Nourishing immune cells with complex iron may thus represent a promising antigen-independent immunotherapeutic approach to improve efficacy in allergen immunotherapy.
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Keywords: holo-Bet v 1, major allergen, immunomodulation, immune resilience, iron, quercetin, birch pollen, pathogenesis-related proteins, innate defense, nutritional immunity, Food Science, Physiology, Biochemistry, Molecular Biology, Clinical Biochemistry, Cell Biology
ISSN: 2076-3921
Publisher: MDPI Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute
Note: Funding Information: F.R.-W., L.F.P. and E.J.-J. declare inventorship of EP2894478 (Roth-Walter F et al., Method and means for diagnosing and treating allergy.) (applicant Biomedical International R+D GmbH, Vienna, Austria). E.J.-J. declares shareholdership in Biomedical Int. R+D GmbH, Vienna, Austria. F.R.-W. received research funding from Biomedical International R+D GmbH, Vienna, Austria, Bencard Allergie GmbH, Munich, Germany and Vienna, Austria, and Allergy Therapeutics, Worthing, UK. Moreover, she received lecture honoraria by Bencard Allergie GmbH, Munich, Germany and Vienna, Austria, and Allergy Therapeutics, Worthing, UK. The other authors declare no relevant conflict of interest in relation to this publication. Funding Information: The study was partly supported by Biomedical Int. R+D GmbH, Vienna, Austria and by Bencard Allergy GmbH, Munich, Germany. A.F. and K.H. were supported by the Danube Allergy Research Cluster-DARC #08 of the Karl-Landsteiner University, Krems, Austria, to E.J.-J. Publisher Copyright: © 2022 by the authors.
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