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Exploring geographic differences in IgE response through network and manifold analyses.

Title: Exploring geographic differences in IgE response through network and manifold analyses.
Authors: Cucco, Alex; Pearce, Neil; Simpson, Angela; Pembrey, Lucy; Mpairwe, Harriet; Figueiredo, Camila A; Cooper, Philip J; Douwes, Jeroen; Brooks, Collin; Adcock, Ian M; Kermani, Nazanin Zounemat; Roberts, Graham DM; Murray, Clare S; Custovic, Adnan; Fontanella, Sara; WASP Study Group; STELAR/UNICORN Consortium; U-BIOPRED Consortium
Publisher Information: Elsevier BV
Publication Year: 2026
Collection: London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine: LSHTM Research Online
Description: BACKGROUND: Component-resolved diagnostics allow detailed assessment of IgE sensitization to multiple allergenic molecules (component-specific IgEs, or c-sIgEs) and may be useful for asthma diagnosis. However, to effectively use component-resolved diagnostics across diverse settings, it is crucial to account for geographic differences. OBJECTIVE: We investigated spatial determinants of c-sIgE networks to facilitate development of diagnostic algorithms applicable globally. METHODS: We used multiplex component-resolved diagnostics array to measure c-sIgE to 112 proteins in an international collaboration of several studies: WASP (World Asthma Phenotypes; United Kingdom, New Zealand, Brazil, Ecuador, and Uganda), U-BIOPRED (Unbiased Biomarkers for the Prediction of Respiratory Disease Outcomes; 7 European countries), and MAAS (Manchester Asthma and Allergy Study, a UK population-based birth cohort). Hierarchical clustering on low-dimensional representation of co-occurrence networks ascertained sensitization and c-sigE clusters across populations. Cross-country comparisons focused on a common subset of 18 c-sIgEs. We investigated sensitization networks across regions in relation to asthma severity. RESULTS: Sensitization profiles shared similarities across regions. For 18 c-sIgEs shared across study populations, the response structure enabled differentiation between different geographic areas and study designs, revealing 3 clusters: (1) Uganda, Ecuador, and Brazil, (2) U-BIOPRED children and adults, and (3) New Zealand, United Kingdom, and MAAS. Spectral clustering identified differences between clusters. We observed constant, almost parallel shifts between severe and nonsevere asthma in each country. CONCLUSIONS: Patterns of c-sIgE response reflect geographic location and study design. However, despite geographic differences in c-sIgE networks, there is a remarkably consistent shift between networks of subjects with nonsevere and severe asthma.
Document Type: article in journal/newspaper
File Description: text
Language: English
ISSN: 0091-6749
Relation: https://researchonline.lshtm.ac.uk/id/eprint/4677130/1/Cucco-etal-2025-Exploring-geographic-differences.pdf; Cucco, Alex; Pearce, Neil ORCID logo; Simpson, Angela; Pembrey, Lucy; Mpairwe, Harriet; Figueiredo, Camila A; Cooper, Philip J; Douwes, Jeroen; Brooks, Collin; Adcock, Ian M; +8 more.Kermani, Nazanin Zounemat; Roberts, Graham DM; Murray, Clare S; Custovic, Adnan; Fontanella, Sara; WASP Study Group; STELAR/UNICORN Consortium; and U-BIOPRED Consortium (2026) Exploring geographic differences in IgE response through network and manifold analyses. The Journal of allergy and clinical immunology, 157 (1). pp. 262-272. ISSN 0091-6749 DOI:10.1016/j.jaci.2025.05.032
DOI: 10.1016/j.jaci.2025.05.032
Availability: https://researchonline.lshtm.ac.uk/id/eprint/4677130/; https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jaci.2025.05.032
Rights: cc_by_4
Accession Number: edsbas.FEF5B2F9
Database: BASE