The aim of the present study was to identify and characterize the celiacogenic/immunogenic proteins and peptides released during digestion of pasta (Triticum durum semolina). Cooked pasta was digested using a harmonized in vitro static model of oral-gastro-duodenal digestion. The course of pasta protein digestion was monitored by SDS-PAGE, and gluten proteins were specifically analyzed by Western blot using sera of celiac patients. Among the allergens, nonspecific lipid-transfer protein was highly resistant to gastroduodenal hydrolysis, while other digestion-stable allergens such as alpha-amylase/trypsin inhibitors were not detected being totally released in the pasta cooking water. To simulate the final stage of intestinal degradation, the gastroduodenal digesta were incubated with porcine jejunal brush-border membrane hydrolases. Sixty-one peptides surviving the brush-border membrane peptidases were identified by liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry, including several gluten-derived sequences encrypting different motifs responsible for the induction of celiac disease. These results provide new insights into the persistence of wheat-derived peptides during digestion of cooked pasta samples.
Tracking the Fate of Pasta (T. Durum Semolina) Immunogenic Proteins by in Vitro Simulated Digestion / Mamone, G; Nitride, C.; Picariello, G.; Addeo, Francesco; Ferranti, Pasquale; Mackie, A.. - In: JOURNAL OF AGRICULTURAL AND FOOD CHEMISTRY. - ISSN 1520-5118. - 63:10(2015), pp. 2660-2667. [10.1021/jf505461x]
Tracking the Fate of Pasta (T. Durum Semolina) Immunogenic Proteins by in Vitro Simulated Digestion
Nitride, C.;ADDEO, FRANCESCO;FERRANTI, PASQUALE;
2015
Abstract
The aim of the present study was to identify and characterize the celiacogenic/immunogenic proteins and peptides released during digestion of pasta (Triticum durum semolina). Cooked pasta was digested using a harmonized in vitro static model of oral-gastro-duodenal digestion. The course of pasta protein digestion was monitored by SDS-PAGE, and gluten proteins were specifically analyzed by Western blot using sera of celiac patients. Among the allergens, nonspecific lipid-transfer protein was highly resistant to gastroduodenal hydrolysis, while other digestion-stable allergens such as alpha-amylase/trypsin inhibitors were not detected being totally released in the pasta cooking water. To simulate the final stage of intestinal degradation, the gastroduodenal digesta were incubated with porcine jejunal brush-border membrane hydrolases. Sixty-one peptides surviving the brush-border membrane peptidases were identified by liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry, including several gluten-derived sequences encrypting different motifs responsible for the induction of celiac disease. These results provide new insights into the persistence of wheat-derived peptides during digestion of cooked pasta samples.File | Dimensione | Formato | |
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