H
Heimo Breiteneder
Researcher at Medical University of Vienna
Publications - 282
Citations - 15481
Heimo Breiteneder is an academic researcher from Medical University of Vienna. The author has contributed to research in topics: Allergen & Epitope. The author has an hindex of 65, co-authored 271 publications receiving 14206 citations. Previous affiliations of Heimo Breiteneder include University of Vienna & University of Salzburg.
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Journal ArticleDOI
EAACI Molecular Allergology User's Guide.
Paolo Maria Matricardi,Jörg Kleine-Tebbe,Hans Jürgen Hoffmann,Rudolf Valenta,Christiane Hilger,Stephanie Hofmaier,Rob C. Aalberse,Ioana Agache,Riccardo Asero,Barbara Ballmer-Weber,Domingo Barber,Kirsten Beyer,Tilo Biedermann,M. B. Bilò,Simon Blank,Barbara Bohle,Philipp P. Bosshard,Heimo Breiteneder,Helen A. Brough,Luis Caraballo,J-C Caubet,Reto Crameri,Janet M. Davies,Nikolaos Douladiris,M. Ebisawa,Philippe Eigenmann,Montserrat Fernandez-Rivas,Fatima Ferreira,Gabriele Gadermaier,Martin Glatz,Robert G. Hamilton,Thomas Hawranek,P W Hellings,Karin Hoffmann-Sommergruber,Thilo Jakob,Uta Jappe,Marek Jutel,Sandip D. Kamath,Edward F. Knol,Peter Korošec,Annette Kuehn,Gideon Lack,Gideon Lack,Andreas L. Lopata,Mika J. Mäkelä,Martine Morisset,Verena Niederberger,Anna Nowak-Wegrzyn,Nikolaos G. Papadopoulos,Elide A. Pastorello,Gabrielle Pauli,Thomas A.E. Platts-Mills,Daniela Posa,Lars K. Poulsen,Monika Raulf,Joaquín Sastre,Enrico Scala,Johannes Schmid,Peter Schmid-Grendelmeier,M. van Hage,R. van Ree,Stefan Vieths,Richard W. Weber,Magnus Wickman,Antonella Muraro,Markus Ollert +65 more
TL;DR: The European Academy of Allergy and Clinical Immunology (EAACI) Molecular Allergology User's Guide (MAUG) as mentioned in this paper provides comprehensive information on important allergens and describes the diagnostic options using component-resolved diagnosis (CRD).
Journal ArticleDOI
Molecular and biochemical classification of plant-derived food allergens.
Heimo Breiteneder,Christof Ebner +1 more
TL;DR: Allergens other than PR homologs can be allotted to other well-known protein families such as inhibitors of alpha-amylases and trypsin from cereal seeds, profilins from fruits and vegetables, seed storage proteins from nuts and mustard seeds, and proteases from fruits.
Journal ArticleDOI
A classification of plant food allergens.
TL;DR: This review focuses on a classification system of plant food allergens that is emerging from the synopsis of allergology and protein evolution.
Journal ArticleDOI
Allergens are distributed into few protein families and possess a restricted number of biochemical functions.
TL;DR: The small number of protein families that contain allergens and the narrow functional distribution of most allergens confirm the existence of yet unknown factors that render proteins allergenic.
Journal ArticleDOI
Microarrayed allergen molecules: diagnostic gatekeepers for allergy treatment.
Reinhard Hiller,Sylvia Laffer,Christian Harwanegg,Martin Huber,Wolfgang M. Schmidt,Anna Twardosz,Bianca Barletta,Wolf M. Becker,Kurt Blaser,Heimo Breiteneder,Martin C. Chapman,Reto Crameri,Michael Duchêne,Fatima Ferreira,H. Fiebig,Karin Hoffmann-Sommergruber,T.P. King,Tamara Kleber-Janke,Viswanath P. Kurup,Samuel B. Lehrer,Jonas Lidholm,Ulrich Müller,Carlo Pini,Gerald Reese,Otto Scheiner,Annika Scheynius,Horng-Der Shen,Susanne Spitzauer,Roland Suck,Ines Swoboda,Wayne R. Thomas,Raffaela Tinghino,Marianne van Hage-Hamsten,Tuomas Virtanen,Dietrich Kraft,Manfred W. Muller,Rudolf Valenta +36 more
TL;DR: The allergen microarray allows the determination and monitoring of allergic patients’ IgE reactivity profiles to large numbers of disease‐causing allergens by using single measurements and minute amounts of serum, and may change established practice in allergy diagnosis, prevention, and therapy.