Allergenicity resulting from functional mimicry of a Toll-like receptor complex protein

A Trompette, S Divanovic, A Visintin, C Blanchard… - Nature, 2009 - nature.com
A Trompette, S Divanovic, A Visintin, C Blanchard, RS Hegde, R Madan, PS Thorne
Nature, 2009nature.com
Aeroallergy results from maladaptive immune responses to ubiquitous, otherwise innocuous
environmental proteins. Although the proteins targeted by aeroallergic responses represent
a tiny fraction of the airborne proteins humans are exposed to, allergenicity is a quite public
phenomenon—the same proteins typically behave as aeroallergens across the human
population. Why particular proteins tend to act as allergens in susceptible hosts is a
fundamental mechanistic question that remains largely unanswered. The main house-dust …
Abstract
Aeroallergy results from maladaptive immune responses to ubiquitous, otherwise innocuous environmental proteins. Although the proteins targeted by aeroallergic responses represent a tiny fraction of the airborne proteins humans are exposed to, allergenicity is a quite public phenomenon—the same proteins typically behave as aeroallergens across the human population. Why particular proteins tend to act as allergens in susceptible hosts is a fundamental mechanistic question that remains largely unanswered. The main house-dust-mite allergen, Der p 2, has structural homology with MD-2 (also known as LY96), the lipopolysaccharide (LPS)-binding component of the Toll-like receptor (TLR) 4 signalling complex,,. Here we show that Der p 2 also has functional homology, facilitating signalling through direct interactions with the TLR4 complex, and reconstituting LPS-driven TLR4 signalling in the absence of MD-2. Mirroring this, airway sensitization and challenge with Der p 2 led to experimental allergic asthma in wild type and MD-2-deficient, but not TLR4-deficient, mice. Our results indicate that Der p 2 tends to be targeted by adaptive immune responses because of its auto-adjuvant properties. The fact that other members of the MD-2-like lipid-binding family are allergens, and that most defined major allergens are thought to be lipid-binding proteins, suggests that intrinsic adjuvant activity by such proteins and their accompanying lipid cargo may have some generality as a mechanism underlying the phenomenon of allergenicity.
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