Outdoor airborne allergens: Characterization, behavior and monitoring in Europe
Aeroallergens or inhalant allergens, are proteins dispersed through the air and have the potential to induce allergic conditions such as rhinitis, conjunctivitis, and asthma. Outdoor aeroallergens are found predominantly in pollen grains and fungal spores, which are allergen carriers. Aeroallergens from pollen and fungi have seasonal emission patterns that correlate with plant pollination and fungal sporulation and are strongly associated with atmospheric weather conditions. They are released when allergen carriers come in contact with the respiratory system, e.g. the nasal mucosa. In addition, due to the rupture of allergen carriers, airborne allergen molecules may be released directly into the air in the form of micronic and submicronic particles (cytoplasmic debris, cell wall fragments, droplets etc.) or adhered onto other airborne particulate matter. Therefore, aeroallergen detection strategies must consider, in addition to the allergen carriers, the allergen molecules themselves. This review article aims to present the current knowledge on inhalant allergens in the outdoor environment, their structure, localization, and factors affecting their production, transformation, release or degradation. In addition, methods for collecting and quantifying aeroallergens are listed and thoroughly discussed. Finally, the knowledge gaps, challenges and implications associated with aeroallergen analysis are described
| Item Type | Article |
|---|---|
| Open Access | Gold |
| Additional information | We acknowledge support from COST Action CA18226 “New approaches in detection of pathogens and aeroallergens (ADOPT)” (www.cost.eu/actions/CA18226), that covered the costs of open-access publication. Authors would also like to thank the following organizations for financial support: Carsten Ambelas Skjøth was awarded RECRUIT grant (2022-2029) from Novo Nordisk Foundation; Łukasz Grewling holds OPUS-20 (no 2020/39/B/ST10/01554) grant from Polish National Science Centre; Ana R. Costa, Célia M. Antunes and Helena Ribeiro have been supported by Portuguese Foundation for Science and Technology through the ICT project (UIDB/04683/2020), ref. POCI-01-0145-FEDER-007690; Ibon Eguiluz-Gracia holds a Juan Rodes Contract (JR19/00029) granted by Instituto de Salud Carlos III from the Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness; Pia Viuf Ørby was supported by BERTHA - the Danish Big Data Centre for Environment and Health, funded by the Novo Nordisk Foundation Challenge Programme (grant NNF17OC0027864); Sónia Pereira benefits from a PhD grant (UI/BD/150862/2021) supported by Portuguese Foundation for Science and Technology; Merita Xhetani and Mirela Lika have been supported by READ grands 2022-2023, from Albanian-American Development Foundation (AADF and IIE). |
| Keywords | Pollen grains , Fungal spores, Aeroallergens, Allergenic proteins, Monitoring, Immunodetection, Air pollution |
| Date Deposited | 05 Dec 2025 10:39 |
| Last Modified | 19 Dec 2025 14:56 |


