Invention Grant
- Patent Title: Methods and reagents for decreasing clinical reaction to allergy
- Patent Title (中): 减少临床反应过敏的方法和试剂
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Application No.: US11329924Application Date: 2006-01-10
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Publication No.: US07879977B2Publication Date: 2011-02-01
- Inventor: A. Wesley Burks, Jr. , Gary A. Bannon , Hugh A. Sampson , Ricki M. Helm , Gael Cockrell , J. Steven Stanley , Nina E. King
- Applicant: A. Wesley Burks, Jr. , Gary A. Bannon , Hugh A. Sampson , Ricki M. Helm , Gael Cockrell , J. Steven Stanley , Nina E. King
- Applicant Address: US AK Little Rock US NY New York
- Assignee: University of Arkansas,Mount Sinai School of Medicine of New York University
- Current Assignee: University of Arkansas,Mount Sinai School of Medicine of New York University
- Current Assignee Address: US AK Little Rock US NY New York
- Agency: Choate Hall & Stewart LLP
- Agent Brenda Herschbach Jarrell; Katherine Nicole Clouse
- Main IPC: C07K14/415
- IPC: C07K14/415 ; A61K39/35

Abstract:
It has been determined that allergens, which are characterized by both humoral (IgE) and cellular (T cell) binding sites, can be modified to be less allergenic by modifying the IgE binding sites. The IgE binding sites can be converted to non-IgE binding sites by masking the site with a compound that prevents IgE binding or by altering as little as a single amino acid within the protein, most typically a hydrophobic residue towards the center of the IgE-binding epitope, to eliminate IgE binding. The method allows the protein to be altered as minimally as possible, other than-within the IgE-binding sites, while retaining the ability of the protein to activate T cells, and, in some embodiments by not significantly altering or decreasing IgG binding capacity The examples use peanut allergens to demonstrate alteration of IgE binding sites. The critical amino acids within each of the IgE binding epitopes of the peanut protein that are important to immunoglobulin binding have been determined. Substitution of even a single amino acid within each of the epitopes led to loss of IgE binding. Although the epitopes shared no common amino acid sequence motif, the hydrophobic residues located in the center of the epitope appeared to be most critical to IgE binding.
Public/Granted literature
- US20070213507A1 Methods and reagents for decreasing clinical reaction to allergy Public/Granted day:2007-09-13
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