Influence of maturation on the alteration of allergenicity of green pea (Pisum sativum L.).
Lykilorð
Útdráttur
The IgE-binding capacity of different maturation levels of green pea seeds (Pisum sativum L.) of the variety Maxigolt is examined to determine the influence of maturation on the alteration of allergenicity. Different protein extraction methods to get total protein extracts and the protein fractions glutelin, globulin, and albumin from different maturation levels of green pea seeds are applied to SDS-PAGE/silver staining as well as SDS-PAGE/immunoblotting and EAST inhibition experiments using sera of 15 green pea allergic individuals. The SDS-PAGE/silver-staining experiments show the continuous change of protein pattern during maturation. SDS-PAGE/immunoblot and EAST inhibition demonstrate that all levels of green pea seeds show relevant IgE-binding capacity, as do immature seeds. Total IgE-binding capacity rises with the progress of maturation. Although the main allergenic activity is dependent upon the albumin fraction, the glutelin and globulin fractions are also important. The implication of these results is an obvious allergenic potency of all maturation levels, even immature seeds, whereas an increase of allergenicity during maturation could be notched up. The highest allergenic potency is caused by the albumin fraction, but globulin and glutelin fractions also contribute to the allergenicity of green pea.