Data_Sheet_3_Occupational Allergic Sensitization Among Workers Processing King Crab (Paralithodes camtschaticus) and Edible Crab (Cancer pagurus) in Norway and Identification of Novel Putative Allergenic Proteins.xlsx

Introduction: Asthma and allergy occur frequently among seafood processing workers, with the highest prevalence seen in the crustacean processing industry. In this study we established for the first time the prevalence of allergic sensitization in the Norwegian king- and edible crab processing indus...

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Main Authors: Marte R. Thomassen, Sandip D. Kamath, Berit E. Bang, Roni Nugraha, Shuai Nie, Nicholas A. Williamson, Andreas L. Lopata, Lisbeth Aasmoe
Format: Dataset
Language:unknown
Published: 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.3389/falgy.2021.718824.s003
https://figshare.com/articles/dataset/Data_Sheet_3_Occupational_Allergic_Sensitization_Among_Workers_Processing_King_Crab_Paralithodes_camtschaticus_and_Edible_Crab_Cancer_pagurus_in_Norway_and_Identification_of_Novel_Putative_Allergenic_Proteins_xlsx/16390458
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spelling ftfrontimediafig:oai:figshare.com:article/16390458 2023-05-15T17:54:37+02:00 Data_Sheet_3_Occupational Allergic Sensitization Among Workers Processing King Crab (Paralithodes camtschaticus) and Edible Crab (Cancer pagurus) in Norway and Identification of Novel Putative Allergenic Proteins.xlsx Marte R. Thomassen Sandip D. Kamath Berit E. Bang Roni Nugraha Shuai Nie Nicholas A. Williamson Andreas L. Lopata Lisbeth Aasmoe 2021-08-23T04:12:57Z https://doi.org/10.3389/falgy.2021.718824.s003 https://figshare.com/articles/dataset/Data_Sheet_3_Occupational_Allergic_Sensitization_Among_Workers_Processing_King_Crab_Paralithodes_camtschaticus_and_Edible_Crab_Cancer_pagurus_in_Norway_and_Identification_of_Novel_Putative_Allergenic_Proteins_xlsx/16390458 unknown doi:10.3389/falgy.2021.718824.s003 https://figshare.com/articles/dataset/Data_Sheet_3_Occupational_Allergic_Sensitization_Among_Workers_Processing_King_Crab_Paralithodes_camtschaticus_and_Edible_Crab_Cancer_pagurus_in_Norway_and_Identification_of_Novel_Putative_Allergenic_Proteins_xlsx/16390458 CC BY 4.0 CC-BY Medicine Molecular Biology Immunology Allergy Innate Immunity crab ige antibody hemocyanin occupational asthma proteomics shellfish tropomyosin Dataset 2021 ftfrontimediafig https://doi.org/10.3389/falgy.2021.718824.s003 2021-08-25T23:00:16Z Introduction: Asthma and allergy occur frequently among seafood processing workers, with the highest prevalence seen in the crustacean processing industry. In this study we established for the first time the prevalence of allergic sensitization in the Norwegian king- and edible crab processing industry and characterized the IgE-reactive proteins. Materials and Methods: Two populations of crab processing workers participated; 119 king crab and 65 edible crab workers. The investigation included information on work tasks and health through a detailed questionnaire. Allergic sensitization was investigated by crab-specific IgE quantification and skin prick tests (SPT) to four in-house prepared crab extracts; raw meat, cooked meat, raw intestines and raw shell. Allergen-specific IgE binding patterns were analyzed by IgE immunoblotting to the four allergen extracts using worker serum samples. Total proteins in crab SPT extracts and immunoblot-based IgE binding proteins were identified by mass spectrometric analysis. Results: Positive SPTs were established in 17.5% of king- and 18.1% of edible crab workers, while elevated IgE to crab were demonstrated in 8.9% of king- and 12.2% of edible crab processing workers. There was no significant difference between the king and edible crab workers with respect to self-reported respiratory symptoms, elevated specific IgE to crab or SPT results. Individual workers exhibited differential IgE binding patterns to different crab extracts, with most frequent binding to tropomyosin and arginine kinase and two novel IgE binding proteins, hemocyanin and enolase, identified as king- and edible crab allergens. Conclusions: Occupational exposure to king- and edible crabs may frequently cause IgE mediated allergic sensitization. Future investigations addressing the diagnostic value of crab allergens including tropomyosin and arginine kinase and the less well-known IgE-binding proteins hemocyanin and enolase in a component-resolved diagnostic approach to crab allergy should be encouraged. Dataset Paralithodes camtschaticus Frontiers: Figshare Norway
institution Open Polar
collection Frontiers: Figshare
op_collection_id ftfrontimediafig
language unknown
topic Medicine
Molecular Biology
Immunology
Allergy
Innate Immunity
crab
ige antibody
hemocyanin
occupational asthma
proteomics
shellfish
tropomyosin
spellingShingle Medicine
Molecular Biology
Immunology
Allergy
Innate Immunity
crab
ige antibody
hemocyanin
occupational asthma
proteomics
shellfish
tropomyosin
Marte R. Thomassen
Sandip D. Kamath
Berit E. Bang
Roni Nugraha
Shuai Nie
Nicholas A. Williamson
Andreas L. Lopata
Lisbeth Aasmoe
Data_Sheet_3_Occupational Allergic Sensitization Among Workers Processing King Crab (Paralithodes camtschaticus) and Edible Crab (Cancer pagurus) in Norway and Identification of Novel Putative Allergenic Proteins.xlsx
topic_facet Medicine
Molecular Biology
Immunology
Allergy
Innate Immunity
crab
ige antibody
hemocyanin
occupational asthma
proteomics
shellfish
tropomyosin
description Introduction: Asthma and allergy occur frequently among seafood processing workers, with the highest prevalence seen in the crustacean processing industry. In this study we established for the first time the prevalence of allergic sensitization in the Norwegian king- and edible crab processing industry and characterized the IgE-reactive proteins. Materials and Methods: Two populations of crab processing workers participated; 119 king crab and 65 edible crab workers. The investigation included information on work tasks and health through a detailed questionnaire. Allergic sensitization was investigated by crab-specific IgE quantification and skin prick tests (SPT) to four in-house prepared crab extracts; raw meat, cooked meat, raw intestines and raw shell. Allergen-specific IgE binding patterns were analyzed by IgE immunoblotting to the four allergen extracts using worker serum samples. Total proteins in crab SPT extracts and immunoblot-based IgE binding proteins were identified by mass spectrometric analysis. Results: Positive SPTs were established in 17.5% of king- and 18.1% of edible crab workers, while elevated IgE to crab were demonstrated in 8.9% of king- and 12.2% of edible crab processing workers. There was no significant difference between the king and edible crab workers with respect to self-reported respiratory symptoms, elevated specific IgE to crab or SPT results. Individual workers exhibited differential IgE binding patterns to different crab extracts, with most frequent binding to tropomyosin and arginine kinase and two novel IgE binding proteins, hemocyanin and enolase, identified as king- and edible crab allergens. Conclusions: Occupational exposure to king- and edible crabs may frequently cause IgE mediated allergic sensitization. Future investigations addressing the diagnostic value of crab allergens including tropomyosin and arginine kinase and the less well-known IgE-binding proteins hemocyanin and enolase in a component-resolved diagnostic approach to crab allergy should be encouraged.
format Dataset
author Marte R. Thomassen
Sandip D. Kamath
Berit E. Bang
Roni Nugraha
Shuai Nie
Nicholas A. Williamson
Andreas L. Lopata
Lisbeth Aasmoe
author_facet Marte R. Thomassen
Sandip D. Kamath
Berit E. Bang
Roni Nugraha
Shuai Nie
Nicholas A. Williamson
Andreas L. Lopata
Lisbeth Aasmoe
author_sort Marte R. Thomassen
title Data_Sheet_3_Occupational Allergic Sensitization Among Workers Processing King Crab (Paralithodes camtschaticus) and Edible Crab (Cancer pagurus) in Norway and Identification of Novel Putative Allergenic Proteins.xlsx
title_short Data_Sheet_3_Occupational Allergic Sensitization Among Workers Processing King Crab (Paralithodes camtschaticus) and Edible Crab (Cancer pagurus) in Norway and Identification of Novel Putative Allergenic Proteins.xlsx
title_full Data_Sheet_3_Occupational Allergic Sensitization Among Workers Processing King Crab (Paralithodes camtschaticus) and Edible Crab (Cancer pagurus) in Norway and Identification of Novel Putative Allergenic Proteins.xlsx
title_fullStr Data_Sheet_3_Occupational Allergic Sensitization Among Workers Processing King Crab (Paralithodes camtschaticus) and Edible Crab (Cancer pagurus) in Norway and Identification of Novel Putative Allergenic Proteins.xlsx
title_full_unstemmed Data_Sheet_3_Occupational Allergic Sensitization Among Workers Processing King Crab (Paralithodes camtschaticus) and Edible Crab (Cancer pagurus) in Norway and Identification of Novel Putative Allergenic Proteins.xlsx
title_sort data_sheet_3_occupational allergic sensitization among workers processing king crab (paralithodes camtschaticus) and edible crab (cancer pagurus) in norway and identification of novel putative allergenic proteins.xlsx
publishDate 2021
url https://doi.org/10.3389/falgy.2021.718824.s003
https://figshare.com/articles/dataset/Data_Sheet_3_Occupational_Allergic_Sensitization_Among_Workers_Processing_King_Crab_Paralithodes_camtschaticus_and_Edible_Crab_Cancer_pagurus_in_Norway_and_Identification_of_Novel_Putative_Allergenic_Proteins_xlsx/16390458
geographic Norway
geographic_facet Norway
genre Paralithodes camtschaticus
genre_facet Paralithodes camtschaticus
op_relation doi:10.3389/falgy.2021.718824.s003
https://figshare.com/articles/dataset/Data_Sheet_3_Occupational_Allergic_Sensitization_Among_Workers_Processing_King_Crab_Paralithodes_camtschaticus_and_Edible_Crab_Cancer_pagurus_in_Norway_and_Identification_of_Novel_Putative_Allergenic_Proteins_xlsx/16390458
op_rights CC BY 4.0
op_rightsnorm CC-BY
op_doi https://doi.org/10.3389/falgy.2021.718824.s003
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