| Literature DB >> 16793522 |
Matthew Siegel1, Michael T Bethune, Jonathan Gass, Jennifer Ehren, Jiang Xia, Alexandre Johannsen, Tor B Stuge, Gary M Gray, Peter P Lee, Chaitan Khosla.
Abstract
Celiac sprue (also known as celiac disease) is an inheritable, gluten-induced enteropathy of the upper small intestine with an estimated prevalence of 0.5%-1% in most parts of the world. The ubiquitous nature of food gluten, coupled with inadequate labeling regulations in most countries, constantly poses a threat of disease exacerbation and relapse for patients. Here, we demonstrate that a two-enzyme cocktail comprised of a glutamine-specific cysteine protease (EP-B2) that functions under gastric conditions and a PEP, which acts in concert with pancreatic proteases under duodenal conditions, is a particularly potent candidate for celiac sprue therapy. At a gluten:EP-B2:PEP weight ratio of 75:3:1, grocery store gluten is fully detoxified within 10 min of simulated duodenal conditions, as judged by chromatographic analysis, biopsy-derived T cell proliferation assays, and a commercial antigluten antibody test.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2006 PMID: 16793522 DOI: 10.1016/j.chembiol.2006.04.009
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Chem Biol ISSN: 1074-5521