TY - JOUR
T1 - Comparison of allergenic properties of Salmon (Oncorhynchus nerka) between landlocked and anadromous species
AU - Kondo, Yasuto
AU - Ahn, Jeakun
AU - Komatsubara, Ryo
AU - Terada, Akihiko
AU - Yasüda, Toshitaka
AU - Tsuge, Ikuya
AU - Urisu, Atsuo
N1 - Funding Information:
This study was supported by Health and Labour Sciences Research Grants for Research on Food Safety from the Ministry of Health, Labour, and Welfare of Japan.
PY - 2009
Y1 - 2009
N2 - Background: Salmon is one of the most widely consumed seafoods in Japan and many other countries around the world. Due to the confirmed cases of salmon-induced allergy, the food sanitation law in Japan stipulates salmon as one of the specific food items for which labeling is recommended when used as an ingredient of processed foods. However, trout, the landlocked form of anadromous salmon, is not subject to the allergen-labeling requirements, even though both populations belong to a single species. Since no supporting data have been demonstrated to make a clear distinction between these two populations in terms of allergenicity, we comparatively examined their allergenic properties using sera from patients allergic to fish. Methods: Extracts of Oncorhynchus nerka from different habitats were obtained: kokanee (landlocked) and red salmon (anadromous). Control extracts were derived from four other species. This study focused on the (1) IgE-binding capacity of the fish extracts in patients' sera (n = 50), (2) ELISA inhibition test (n = 6), and (3) inhibition immunoblot test (n = 8) between the kokanee and red salmon. Results: The extracts from kokanee and red salmon showed the highest correlation with each other in terms of the IgE-binding capacity, and showed complete (100%) reciprocal cross-inhibition in the ELISA inhibition test. On immunoblotting, there was no marked difference in the staining pattern between the two extracts, and each IgE-binding band gradually disappeared when the patients' sera were preincubated with the counterpart antigen in a dose-dependent manner. Conclusions: These results suggest that kokanee has similar allergenic properties to red salmon.
AB - Background: Salmon is one of the most widely consumed seafoods in Japan and many other countries around the world. Due to the confirmed cases of salmon-induced allergy, the food sanitation law in Japan stipulates salmon as one of the specific food items for which labeling is recommended when used as an ingredient of processed foods. However, trout, the landlocked form of anadromous salmon, is not subject to the allergen-labeling requirements, even though both populations belong to a single species. Since no supporting data have been demonstrated to make a clear distinction between these two populations in terms of allergenicity, we comparatively examined their allergenic properties using sera from patients allergic to fish. Methods: Extracts of Oncorhynchus nerka from different habitats were obtained: kokanee (landlocked) and red salmon (anadromous). Control extracts were derived from four other species. This study focused on the (1) IgE-binding capacity of the fish extracts in patients' sera (n = 50), (2) ELISA inhibition test (n = 6), and (3) inhibition immunoblot test (n = 8) between the kokanee and red salmon. Results: The extracts from kokanee and red salmon showed the highest correlation with each other in terms of the IgE-binding capacity, and showed complete (100%) reciprocal cross-inhibition in the ELISA inhibition test. On immunoblotting, there was no marked difference in the staining pattern between the two extracts, and each IgE-binding band gradually disappeared when the patients' sera were preincubated with the counterpart antigen in a dose-dependent manner. Conclusions: These results suggest that kokanee has similar allergenic properties to red salmon.
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U2 - 10.2332/allergolint.08-OA-0064
DO - 10.2332/allergolint.08-OA-0064
M3 - Article
C2 - 19390241
AN - SCOPUS:67651156164
SN - 1323-8930
VL - 58
SP - 295
EP - 299
JO - Allergology International
JF - Allergology International
IS - 2
ER -