Cells (Jul 2019)

Analysis of Allergen-Specific T Cell and IgE Reactivity to Different Preparations of Cow’s Milk-Containing Food Extracts

  • Meng Chen,
  • Aaron Sutherland,
  • Giovanni Birrueta,
  • Susan Laubach,
  • Stephanie Leonard,
  • Bjoern Peters,
  • Véronique Schulten

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/cells8070667
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 7
p. 667

Abstract

Read online

Background: cow’s milk allergy (CM) is among the most common food allergies in young children and is often outgrown by adulthood. Prior to developing a tolerance to CM, a majority of CM-allergic children may tolerate extensively-heated CM. This study aims to characterize the IgE- and T cell-reactivity to unheated CM and the progressively more heated CM-containing foods. Methods: CM-containing food extracts from muffin, baked cheese, custard and raw, pasteurized CM commercial extract were tested for skin prick test reactivity, IgE binding and T cell reactivity as assessed by IL-5 and IFNγ production. Results: the skin prick test (SPT) reactivity was significantly decreased to muffin extract compared to raw, pasteurized CM. Both IgE- and T-cell reactivity were readily detectable against food extracts from all forms of CM. Western blot analysis of IgE reactivity revealed variability between extracts that was protein-specific. T cell-reactivity was detected against all four extracts with no significant difference in IL-5 or IFNγ production between them. Conclusion: our data indicate that despite reduced clinical reactivity, extracts from heated CM-containing foods retain immunogenicity when tested in vitro, particularly at the T cell level.

Keywords