alergenom
Alergenom is the term used for the complete set of allergenic molecules associated with a given biological source or environmental context. It encompasses the proteins and glycoproteins that can provoke an allergic immune response, as well as the epitopes that bind IgE antibodies or activate allergen-specific T cells. The concept can apply to an organism’s own allergenic repertoire or to the mixture of allergens present in an environment.
The allergenome of a source includes primary allergens, their isoforms, and related cross-reactive determinants. Environmental allergenomes
Study of the allergenome relies on omics and immunological methods, including proteomics, transcriptomics, and immunoproteomics, as
Applications include improving diagnostics through component-resolved diagnostics (CRD), guiding personalized immunotherapy, and informing strategies to reduce
Limitations involve variability between individuals, geographic differences in exposure, and dynamic expression of allergens. Not all
See also: allergen, allergenicity, IgE, epitope, immunoproteomics, allergen database.