2009
DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2249.2009.03919.x
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TheAnisakis simplexAni s 7 major allergen as an indicator of trueAnisakisinfections

Abstract: SummaryAni s 7 is currently the most important excretory/secretory (ES) Anisakis simplex allergen, as it is the only one recognized by 100% of infected patients. The allergenicity of this molecule is due mainly to the presence of a novel CX17-25CX9-22CX8CX6 tandem repeat motif not seen in any previously reported protein. In this study we used this allergen as a model to investigate how ES allergens are recognized during Anisakis infections, and the usefulness of a recombinant fragment of Ani s 7 allergen (t-An… Show more

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Cited by 58 publications
(51 citation statements)
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“…Excretory/secretory antigens are secreted by the parasite to help penetrate the gut mucosa and are probably the antigens involved in stimulation of the host immune system during active infection (Valls et al 2005). In an experimental study, Anadón et al demonstrated that anti-Ani s 7 IgE antibodies induced by live Anisakis larvae peaked on day 30 postinfection, decreasing over the course of two months (Anadon et al 2009), and that their presence could constitute a possible recent infection (Anadon et al 2010). In the present study, 7.46% (5/67) of volunteers were seroreactive to excretory/secretory antigens.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 50%
“…Excretory/secretory antigens are secreted by the parasite to help penetrate the gut mucosa and are probably the antigens involved in stimulation of the host immune system during active infection (Valls et al 2005). In an experimental study, Anadón et al demonstrated that anti-Ani s 7 IgE antibodies induced by live Anisakis larvae peaked on day 30 postinfection, decreasing over the course of two months (Anadon et al 2009), and that their presence could constitute a possible recent infection (Anadon et al 2010). In the present study, 7.46% (5/67) of volunteers were seroreactive to excretory/secretory antigens.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 50%
“…Interestingly, the major Anisakis allergen recognized by MAb UA3 (Ani s 7) was recently characterized (31), and an internal portion of its sequence (t-Ani s 7) was cloned and expressed in Escherichia coli. Previous results obtained with this allergen as a target in indirect ELISA showed it to be highly specific (3), with a similar sensitivity to that obtained with UA3-capture ELISA (31). However, the t-Ani s 7 ELISA has not yet been tested under field conditions.…”
mentioning
confidence: 66%
“…The panel of allergens studied here was calibrated on the Spanish population, which might explain why Italian patients frequently showed IgE to ‘other' allergens. It has to be kept in mind that our panel lacked Ani s 7, a major allergen and a marker of Anisakis infection [19]. …”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%