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What is the name of the protein that causes allergies?

Started by , Feb 19 2024 09:57 AM
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Dears
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what's your name of protein that cause allergy in 8 food allergens

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is this like a trick question?

Maybe it's trick

I have been asked what is the name of the protein found in fish that causes allergies

I have found this on the NIH website, "A large variety of commonly consumed fish species contain PVALB proteins which are known to cause fish allergies. More than 95% of all fish-induced food allergies are caused by PVALB proteins."    

 

https://www.ncbi.nlm...fish allergies 

 

 

See also histamines in fish.

I am only sharing this information; it is totally out of my wheelhouse.

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[quote name="Setanta" post="202984" timestamp="1708365719"]

I have found this on the NIH website, "A large variety of commonly consumed fish species contain PVALB proteins which are known to cause fish allergies. More than 95% of all fish-induced food allergies are caused by PVALB proteins."

https://www.ncbi.nlm...fish allergies


See also histamines in fish.
I am only sharing this information; it is totally out of my wheelhouse.[/quote

thank you

I have found this on the NIH website, "A large variety of commonly consumed fish species contain PVALB proteins which are known to cause fish allergies. More than 95% of all fish-induced food allergies are caused by PVALB proteins."    

 

https://www.ncbi.nlm...fish allergies 

 

 

See also histamines in fish.

I am only sharing this information; it is totally out of my wheelhouse.

 

That's probably about as close as you'll get.  Different people are reacting to different proteins and different regions of the same proteins.  Surface receptors can be common targets just because they're the first thing to be interacted with.

 

It is the nature of our immune system cells that they break down what they react to and train future generations of immune cells to react to the parts and pieces.  Even within an individual it is likely that different lineages of your immune cells are reacting to a variety of amino acid sequences from the same source.

That's probably about as close as you'll get.  Different people are reacting to different proteins and different regions of the same proteins.  Surface receptors can be common targets just because they're the first thing to be interacted with.

 

It is the nature of our immune system cells that they break down what they react to and train future generations of immune cells to react to the parts and pieces.  Even within an individual it is likely that different lineages of your immune cells are reacting to a variety of amino acid sequences from the same source.

 

http://www.allergeno...asebrowse.shtml - there's actually a database on it. Now interpreting it well, not my wheel house. 

thank you all

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