| Literature DB >> 25889559 |
Sylvie Miquel1,2, Martin Beaumont3,4, Rebeca Martín5,6, Philippe Langella7,8, Véronique Braesco9, Muriel Thomas10,11.
Abstract
This paper concerns the procedure and the scientific approach to obtain market authorization for a microorganism to be recognized as a novel food with a health claim. Microorganisms that have not been traditionally used during food production in Europe prior to 1997 are considered as novel foods, which should undergo an in-depth characterization and safety assessment before being authorized on the European market. If a novel food bacterium is claimed to provide a beneficial effect on health, these claims must also be investigated before they can be authorized. Some requirements to obtain novel food certification are shared with those required to obtain a health claim. Although regulation exists that deals with these issues for foods in general, bacteria in food raise a specific set of questions that are only minimally addressed in official documentation. We propose a framework and suggest a list of criteria that should be assessed to obtain marketing authorization and health claim for a bacterium in accordance with European health policy.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25889559 PMCID: PMC4407354 DOI: 10.1186/s12934-015-0229-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Microb Cell Fact ISSN: 1475-2859 Impact factor: 5.328
Statutory text, official documents of the EFSA
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| Related to the scientific aspects and the presentation of information necessary to support applications to place novel foods and novel food ingredients on the market |
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| Related to novel foods and novel food ingredients of the European Parliament and of the European Council |
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| Complex Novel Food from non-Genetically Modified sources according to Categories of novel foods and novel food ingredients identified in Regulation (EC) No 258/97. Intact plants, animals and microorganisms used as foods as well as food components (e.g. complex carbohydrates, fats, proteins or those substances collectively described as dietary fiber) are included. Two sub-classes can be identified: |
| 2.1 the source of the NF has a history of use in food in the Community. | |
| 2.2 the source of the NF has no history of use in food in the Community. | |
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| Related to nutrition and health claims and establishes rules governing the Community authorization of health claims should only be authorized in the Community after a scientific assessment of the highest possible standard, to be carried out by the EFSA. |
Figure 1Statutory text.
Figure 2Novel food or health claim?
Criteria and methods often proposed to characterize a strain (required for both novel food and health claim regulations)
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| Species | Phenotypic |
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| The physiology of the bacterium in environments from production to consumption should be extensively characterized | ||
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| Genotypic |
| Full genome sequencing should be systematically provided | |
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| Strain | Metabolic |
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| Genotypic |
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Common criteria generally considered as essential for the safety of NF/probiotic products (required for both novel food and health claim regulations)
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| Survival in GI tract conditions | Resistance to intestinal stress |
| Resistance to GI tract conditions may favor the beneficial effects | Not valuable for all beneficial effects | |
| Development of new protectors/encapsulators | |||||
| Bile salt deconjugation | High-performance liquid chromatography | Large amounts of deconjugated bile salts may have undesirable effects on the human host | Evaluation of property | ||
| Mass spectrometry | |||||
| Preservation of the homeostasis of gut barrier components | Microbiota | Perturbation of commensal consortium |
| Bacteriocins and AB may perturb microbiota. | Development of growth inhibitory references with major commensal bacteria |
| AB may interact with a patient’s treatment | |||||
| Antibiotics (AB) resistance |
| AB resistance may be transmitted between bacteria | Development of | ||
| Minimal inhibitory concentration test (MIC) | |||||
| Minimal bactericidal concentration test (CMB) | If plasmids are detected: the presence/absence of genes encoding the most common resistance determinants should be characterized | ||||
| Presence of plasmids |
| Plasmids favor the transmission of antibiotic resistance | Requirement to up-date the antibiotic list | ||
| Mucus | Mucus degradation | Mucin degradation test (agarose gel or liquid culture) | Excessive mucus degradation may lead to intestinal barrier weakening | The capacity to degrade mucus seems to be a poor criterion to estimate the protective or deleterious effect of bacteria on the intestinal barrier | |
| Adhesion and translocation risk | Intestinal/Mucosal adhesion | Test bacterial strain adhesion to epithelial cell line | Mucosal adhesion may interfere with pathogenic microorganisms, stimulate beneficial cellular processes, or favor bacterial translocation | The intestinal/mucosal adhesion capacity can be either a beneficial or a deleterious criterion | |
| Intestinal mucosa degradation | Gelatinase activity assay | Mucosal degradation may weaken the intestinal barrier | It could be useful to evaluate | ||
| Hemolytic activity | Blood agar culture | Hemolysis damages red blood cells | |||
| Metabolic activities | D-Lactate production | Colorimetric assay | D-Lactate accumulation in blood leads to acidosis | The production of D-lactate should be compared with the amount produced by usual strains (like in yoghurt) | |
| Toxin production | Protocol recommended by the European scientific committee of animal nutrition. | Toxic molecules | Establishment of threshold values relevant in humans | ||
| Biogenic amine production | Colorimetric assay | Immune responses such as allergic responses | |||
| Remote effects | Platelet aggregation | Aggregation test | Risk of thrombosis | Development of | |
| Genotoxicity | Toxicity testing on animals models (chronic and subchronic tests) | Risk of cancer | |||
| Allergenicity | Allergic response | ||||
(*: if the complete genome is available).