Journal article
Epigenetic programming underpins B-cell dysfunction in peanut and multi-food allergy
S Imran, MR Neeland, J Koplin, S Dharmage, MLK Tang, S Sawyer, T Dang, V McWilliam, R Peters, KP Perrett, B Novakovic, R Saffery
Clinical and Translational Immunology | Published : 2021
DOI: 10.1002/cti2.1324
Abstract
Objective: Rates of IgE-mediated food allergy (FA) have increased over the last few decades, and mounting evidence implicates disruption of epigenetic profiles in various immune cell types in FA development. Recent data implicate B-cell dysfunction in FA; however, few studies have examined epigenetic changes within these cells. Methods: We assessed epigenetic and transcriptomic profiles in purified B cells from adolescents with FA, comparing single-food-allergic (peanut only), multi-food-allergic (peanut and ≥1 other food) and non-allergic (control) individuals. Adolescents represent a phenotype of persistent and severe FA indicative of a common immune deviation. Results: We identified 144 d..
View full abstractRelated Projects (1)
Grants
Awarded by National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Acknowledgements
This study was funded by an NHMRC (Australia) Project Grant (#1165073) to RS, MN and BN. BN is supported by an NHMRC (Australia) Investigator Grant (#1173314). MN is supported by a Melbourne Children's LifeCourse Fellowship. KP is supported by a Melbourne Children's Clinician Scientist Fellowship. We thank the students, parents and schools that participated in the SchoolNuts study.