| Literature DB >> 21048862 |
Ivana Caputo1, Marilena Lepretti, Stefania Martucciello, Carla Esposito.
Abstract
Celiac disease is a permanent intolerance to the gliadin fraction of wheat gluten and to similar barley and rye proteins that occurs in genetically susceptible subjects. After ingestion, degraded gluten proteins reach the small intestine and trigger an inappropriate T cell-mediated immune response, which can result in intestinal mucosal inflammation and extraintestinal manifestations. To date, no pharmacological treatment is available to gluten-intolerant patients, and a strict, life-long gluten-free diet is the only safe and efficient treatment available. Inevitably, this may produce considerable psychological, emotional, and economic stress. Therefore, the scientific community is very interested in establishing alternative or adjunctive treatments. Attractive and novel forms of therapy include strategies to eliminate detrimental gluten peptides from the celiac diet so that the immunogenic effect of the gluten epitopes can be neutralized, as well as strategies to block the gluten-induced inflammatory response. In the present paper, we review recent developments in the use of enzymes as additives or as processing aids in the food biotechnology industry to detoxify gluten.Entities:
Year: 2010 PMID: 21048862 PMCID: PMC2963796 DOI: 10.4061/2010/174354
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Enzyme Res ISSN: 2090-0414
Figure 1Tissue transglutaminase (tTG)-mediated post-translational modifications in celiac disease. Gliadin peptides reach the subepithelial region of the intestinal mucosa. Here, tTG deamidation of specific glutamines of gliadin peptides generates potent immunostimulatory epitopes that are presented via HLA-DQ2/DQ8 on antigen-presenting cells (APC) to CD4+ T cells. Activated gliadin-specific CD4+ T cells produce high levels of pro-inflammatory cytokines, thus inducing a Th1 response that results in mucosal remodelling and villous atrophy. In addition, tTG transamidation activity generates tTG-gliadin complexes that bind to tTG-specific B cells, are endocytosed and processed. Gliadin-DQ2/DQ8 complexes are then presented by the tTG-specific B cells to gliadin-specific T cells, a process that leads to the production of anti-tTG antibodies.
Potential enzyme therapies for celiac disease.
| Target for detoxification | Detoxifying agent | Mechanism of action | Status of research |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ingested gliadin peptides | Prolyl endopeptidases from: | Hydrolysis of proline-rich peptides of gliadin | Preclinical |
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| Prolyl endopeptidases from: | Clinical trial | ||
| Prolyl endopeptidases from: | Clinical trial | ||
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| Flour | Sourdough lactobacilli-derived peptidases [ | Hydrolysis of proline-rich peptides of gliadin | Clinical trial |
| Sourdough lactobacilli-derived peptidases in combination with fungal proteases [ | Clinical trial | ||
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| Flour | Transglutaminase enzymes [ | Transamidation of gliadin peptides with lysine methyl ester | Preclinical |
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| Mucosal tTG | Irreversible thiol-reactive reagents, competitive peptidic, and nonpeptidic substrates [ | unspecific or specific tTG inhibition | Preclinical |