PLoS ONE (Jan 2015)

Ligand Recognition of the Major Birch Pollen Allergen Bet v 1 is Isoform Dependent.

  • Christian Seutter von Loetzen,
  • Thessa Jacob,
  • Olivia Hartl-Spiegelhauer,
  • Lothar Vogel,
  • Dirk Schiller,
  • Cornelia Spörlein-Güttler,
  • Rainer Schobert,
  • Stefan Vieths,
  • Maximilian Johannes Hartl,
  • Paul Rösch

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0128677
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 6
p. e0128677

Abstract

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Each spring millions of patients suffer from allergies when birch pollen is released into the air. In most cases, the major pollen allergen Bet v 1 is the elicitor of the allergy symptoms. Bet v 1 comes in a variety of isoforms that share virtually identical conformations, but their relative concentrations are plant-specific. Glycosylated flavonoids, such as quercetin-3-O-sophoroside, are the physiological ligands of Bet v 1, and here we found that three isoforms differing in their allergenic potential also show an individual, highly specific binding behaviour for the different ligands. This specificity is driven by the sugar moieties of the ligands rather than the flavonols. While the influence of the ligands on the allergenicity of the Bet v 1 isoforms may be limited, the isoform and ligand mixtures add up to a complex and thus individual fingerprint of the pollen. We suggest that this mixture is not only acting as an effective chemical sunscreen for pollen DNA, but may also play an important role in recognition processes during pollination.