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Extensive protein hydrolyzation is indispensable to prevent IgE-mediated poultry allergen recognition in dogs and cats.
Olivry, Thierry; Bexley, Jennifer; Mougeot, Isabelle.
Afiliação
  • Olivry T; Department of Clinical Sciences, College of Veterinary Medicine, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, NC, USA. tolivry@ncsu.edu.
  • Bexley J; Comparative Medicine Institute, College of Veterinary Medicine, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, NC, USA. tolivry@ncsu.edu.
  • Mougeot I; Avacta Animal Health, Leeds, Wetherby, UK.
BMC Vet Res ; 13(1): 251, 2017 Aug 17.
Article em En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28818076
ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND:

The central premise for the commercialization of diets with hydrolyzed ingredients is that the small-sized digested peptides would be unable to crosslink allergen-specific IgE at the surface of tissue mast cells and induce their degranulation. Evidence for the validity of this concept to diagnose food allergies in dogs and cats is limited, however. Our objectives were to study the recognition of standard and variably hydrolyzed poultry extracts by sera from dogs and cats with elevated chicken-specific serum IgE.

RESULTS:

Forty sera from dogs and 40 from cats with undetectable, low, medium or high serum levels of chicken-specific IgE were tested by ELISA on plates coated with the positive controls chicken, duck and turkey meat extracts and the negative controls beef meat (dogs) or wheat (cats). Plates were also coated with a non-hydrolyzed chicken meal, and mildly- or extensively-hydrolyzed poultry feather extracts. The frequencies of dogs with positive IgE against the various extracts were chicken meat 100%, duck and turkey meats 97%, beef meat 3%, non-hydrolyzed chicken meal 73%, mildly-hydrolyzed poultry feathers 37% and extensively-hydrolyzed poultry feathers 0%. For cats, these respective percentages were (with wheat replacing beef as a negative control) 100, 84, 97, 7, 7, 0 and 0%. To detect any allergenic cross-reactivity between poultry meat-based and feather hydrolysate-derived extracts, an IgE ELISA inhibition was also done. Ten canine sera with the highest level of anti-poultry IgE in the previous experiment were incubated overnight with a previously optimized 50 µg amount of each of the extracts used above. We performed ELISA on plates coated with chicken, duck or turkey meats with or without inhibitors. The median inhibition percentages after incubation with the non-hydrolyzed chicken meal were ~22%, with the mildly-hydrolyzed poultry feathers 14-22%, and those with the extensively-hydrolyzed poultry feathers 5 to 10%; the last inhibition level was similar to that of the beef meat negative control.

CONCLUSIONS:

Altogether, these results suggest that an extensive-but not partial-hydrolyzation of the poultry feather extract is necessary to prevent the recognition of allergenic epitopes by poultry-specific IgE.
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Texto completo: 1 Base de dados: MEDLINE Assunto principal: Imunoglobulina E / Alérgenos / Gatos / Galinhas / Cães Limite: Animals Idioma: En Ano de publicação: 2017 Tipo de documento: Article

Texto completo: 1 Base de dados: MEDLINE Assunto principal: Imunoglobulina E / Alérgenos / Gatos / Galinhas / Cães Limite: Animals Idioma: En Ano de publicação: 2017 Tipo de documento: Article