Non-digestible oligosaccharides scFOS/lcFOS facilitate safe subcutaneous immunotherapy for peanut allergy

Publication date

2019-04-04

Authors

Wagenaar, LauraISNI 0000000506297498
Van Roest, Manon
Kruijssen, Laura J.W.ISNI 0000000506789791
Simons, Peter J.
Boon, Louis
Vonk, M MISNI 0000000436402992
van Esch, BettyORCID 0000-0001-9961-750XISNI 0000000388056369
Knippels, Leon M JISNI 0000000390487918
Garssen, JohanORCID 0000-0002-8678-9182ISNI 0000000034097251
Pieters, RaymondISNI 0000000391793095

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Abstract

Background Improving the safety of subcutaneous immunotherapy (SCIT) for food allergy is necessary to reduce side effects and achieve long-term tolerance. We determined the effect of dietary supplementation with 1% non-digestible short- and long-chain fructo-oligosaccharides (scFOS/lcFOS) on safety and efficacy of SCIT using a peanut allergy mouse model. Methods After sensitization, mice received a scFOS/lcFOS or control diet for the rest of the study. To study safety of SCIT, mice were dosed with a single subcutaneous injection of peanut extract (PE) or PBS. To study efficacy, mice were dosed subcutaneously (SCIT, 3 times/week) with PE or PBS for 3 weeks. Hereafter, acute allergic skin responses, anaphylactic shock symptoms and body temperature were assessed. To study the mechanism in vitro, the human IgE receptor (FcεRI)-transfected rat mast cell (RBL) line was sensitized with an oligoclonal pool of chimeric human (chu)IgE antibodies against bovine β-lactoglobulin (BLG) and incubated with the oligosaccharides before exposure to BLG to assess direct the effect on degranulation. Results scFOS/lcFOS reduced anaphylaxis caused by a single PE SCIT dose. scFOS/lcFOS alone also reduced the acute allergic skin response. Moreover, scFOS/lcFOS supplementation resulted in lower MMCP-1 levels in serum after PE SCIT dose compared to control diet, while antibody levels were not affected by the diet. In vitro incubation with scFOS/lcFOS at 0.5% suppressed the degranulation of IgE-sensitized RBL cells. However, dietary supplementation with scFOS/lcFOS did not improve the efficacy of SCIT. Conclusions We show that scFOS/lcFOS diet improves the safety of SCIT, as evidenced by lower anaphylactic responses without compromising the efficacy in a mouse model for peanut allergy. This effect is likely to result from the suppression of mast cell effector function.

Keywords

Immunotherapy, Mast cells, Non-digestible oligosaccharides, Peanut allergy

Citation

Wagenaar, L, Van Roest, M, Kruijssen, L J W, Simons, P J, Boon, L, Vonk, M M, Van Esch, B C A M, Knippels, L M J, Garssen, J, Pieters, R H H & Smit, J J 2019, 'Non-digestible oligosaccharides scFOS/lcFOS facilitate safe subcutaneous immunotherapy for peanut allergy', Clinical and Molecular Allergy, vol. 17, no. 1, 7. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12948-019-0111-5