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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

New allergy vaccine targets dog immune cells using mite proteins

By Soria, Irene et al.·Published in Veterinary immunology and immunopathology·2017·Inmunotek S.L., Spain·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Mite allergoids coupled to nonoxidized mannan from Saccharomyces cerevisae efficiently target canine dendritic cells for novel allergy immunotherapy in veterinary medicine.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A group of six healthy Spanish Greyhound dogs had their blood used to create a new allergy treatment targeting dust mite allergies. Researchers combined allergens from the Dermatophagoides farinae mite with a substance called nonoxidized mannan to create a hypoallergenic product that could help dogs with allergies. Tests showed that this new treatment was effective at reducing allergic reactions and improving the immune response in the dogs' cells. This innovative approach could lead to better allergy immunotherapy options for dogs suffering from dust mite allergies.

People also search for: dog dust mite allergy treatment · hypoallergenic dog allergy shots · Spanish Greyhound allergy therapy

Abstract

We have recently reported that grass pollen allergoids conjugated with nonoxidized mannan of Saccharomyces cerevisae using glutaraldehyde results in a novel hypoallergenic mannan-allergen complex with improved properties for allergen vaccination. Using this approach, human dendritic cells show a better allergen uptake and cytokine profile production (higher IL-10/IL-4 ratio) for therapeutic purposes. Here we aim to address whether a similar approach can be extended to dogs using canine dendritic cells. Six healthy Spanish Greyhound dogs were used as blood donors to obtain canine dendritic cells (DC) derived from peripheral blood monocytes. Allergens from Dermatophagoides farinae mite were polymerized and conjugated with nonoxidized mannan. Nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR), gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE), immunoblotting and IgE-ELISA inhibition studies were conducted to evaluate the main characteristics of the allergoid obtained. Mannan-allergen conjugate and controls were assayed in vitro for canine DC uptake and production of IL-4 and IL-10. The results indicate that the conjugation of D. farinae allergens with nonoxidized mannan was feasible using glutaraldehyde. The resulting product was a polymerized structure showing a high molecular weight as detected by NMR and SDS-PAGE analysis. The mannan-allergen conjugate was hypoallergenic with a reduced reactivity with specific dog IgE. An increase in both allergen uptake and IL-10/IL-4 ratio was obtained when canine DCs were incubated with the mannan-allergen conjugate, as compared with the control allergen preparations (unmodified D. farinae allergens and oxidized mannan-allergen conjugate). We conclude that hypoallergenic D. farinae allergens coupled to nonoxidized mannan is a novel allergen preparation suitable for canine allergy immunotherapy targeting dendritic cells.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/28778325/