| Literature DB >> 26197307 |
Elena Peñas1, Chiara di Lorenzo2, Francesca Uberti3, Patrizia Restani4.
Abstract
Proteinaceous products are widely used as fining agents during winemaking to remove unwanted insoluble particles and undissolved microscopic particles (colloidal material) from the must or wine to improve stability. Some of them (egg white, caseinates, and fish gelatine) have allergenic potential and the presence of their residues in the final product could represent a risk for allergic individuals. Moreover, lysozyme (an egg allergen) is included among wine additives to control the fermentation processes and avoid spoiling during winemaking. The aim of this paper is to review the experimental/clinical data on the use of allergenic products in enology and the measurement of relative risk for sensitized subjects. In addition, methods developed specifically for the quantification of allergenic residues in must and wine are described.Entities:
Keywords: allergenic residues; egg proteins, milk proteins; fining agents; food allergens; isinglass; winemaking
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26197307 PMCID: PMC6332064 DOI: 10.3390/molecules200713144
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Molecules ISSN: 1420-3049 Impact factor: 4.411
Main allergens of egg white (albumen).
| Protein | International Allergen Code ^ | Protein Content (% Total Protein) | Protein Content (g/100 g Dry Albumen) * |
|---|---|---|---|
| Total protein | - | 100 | 9.7–10.6 |
| Ovomucoid | Gal d 1 | 11 | 1.17 |
| Ovalbumin | Gal d 2 | 54 | 5.72 |
| Ovotransferrin | Gal d 3 | 12 | 1.27 |
| Lysozyme | Gal d 4 | 3.5 | 0.37 |
^ Codes are established by the IUIS Allergen Nomenclature Sub-Committee; * data for single protein calculated on 10.6% of total protein.
Studies reporting data on allergenic residues in wines fined with egg white.
| Type of Wines | Number of Wines | Fining Agent | Dose (g/hL) | Analytical Method | Results of the Study | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| EW | 4 | Egg white | 4, 20 | ELISA | Detection of egg white proteins (0.2 mg/L) wines fined with 20 g/hL; no detectable amounts of egg white proteins in wines fined with 4 g/hL | [
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| CW | 24 | Egg white Whole egg | NS | DBPCFC Blood basophil activation | Lack of anaphylaxis and basophil activation | [
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| CW | 40 | Egg white | 5–15 | ELISA | No detectable amount of egg white proteins | [
|
| EW | 3 | Egg white proteins (with/without lysozyme) | 3, 10 | ELISA | Detection of egg albumin in some wines | [
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| CW | 5 | Egg white proteins | 20 | DBPCFC | Lack of anaphylaxis | [
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| CW | 25 | NS | NS | LC-MS/MS | Detection of ovalbumin (8 wines) and ovotransferrin (2 wines) | [
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| EW (different treatments) | 2 | AlbuVin™ | 16 | ELISA | No detectable amounts of egg white in wines produced with good enological practices | [
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| EW | 14 | Egg white proteins | 3–10 1–66 | ELISA | No detectable amounts of egg white proteins | [
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| CW | 20 | NS | NS | LC-MS/MS | No detectable amounts of egg white proteins | [
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| CW | 8 | NS | NS | ELISA | 7 wines below LoD, one at 1.7 mg/L of whole egg powder concentration | [
|
EW = experimental wine; CW = Commercial wine; ELISA: enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay; DBPCFC: double-blind, placebo controlled food challenge. LC-MS/MS: liquid chromatography coupled with tandem mass spectrometry; NS: not specified; SPT: skin prick test.
Main allergens of cow’s milk.
| Protein | International Allergen Code ^ | Protein Content (% Total Protein) | Protein Content (g/100 g Dry Milk) * |
|---|---|---|---|
| Total protein | - | 100 | 26.15 * |
| Alpha-lactalbumin | Bos d 4 | 5 | 1.31 |
| Beta-lactoglobulin | Bos d 5 | 10 | 2.62 |
| Serum albumin | Bos d 6 | 1 | 0.26 |
| Immunoglobulin | Bos d 7 | 3 | 0.78 |
| Total casein | Bos d 8 | 80 | 20.92 |
| AlphaS1-casein | Bos d 9 | 29 | 7.58 |
| AlphaS2-casein | Bos d 10 | 8 | 2.09 |
| Beta-casein | Bos d 11 | 27 | 7.06 |
| Kappa-casein | Bos d 12 | 10 | 2.62 |
^ Codes are established by the IUIS Allergen Nomenclature Sub-Committee (www.allergen.org); * 13% total solid and 3.4 g/L of proteins.
Studies reporting data on allergenic residues in wines fined with milk derivatives.
| Type of Wines | Number of Wines | Fining Agent | Dose (g/hL) | Analytical Method | Results of the Study | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| EW | 4 | Potassium caseinate | 6, 30 | ELISA | No detectable amounts of caseins | [
|
| CW | 34 | Casein | NS | DBPCFC Blood basophil activation | Lack of anaphylaxis and basophil activation | [
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| CW | 153 | Casein Skim | 10–50 | ELISA | No detectable amounts of caseins | [
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| EW | 32 | Potassium caseinate | 6, 30 with/without bentonite | SDS-PAGE/Immunoblotting | Detection of caseins in 5 out of 93 wines | [
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| EW | 5 | Potassium caseinate | 30 | DBPCFC | Lack of anaphylaxis | [
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| EW | 4 | Caseinate | 10–60 | Sandwich-ELISA | Detection of casein in experimental and commercial wines | [
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| EW | 2 | Caseinate | 10, 100 | CapLC-ESI-MS/MS | Detection of residual caseins | [
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| EW | 16 | Caseinate | 20, 50 | Immunoblotting | No detectable amount of caseins | [
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| EW (different treatments) | NS | KalCasin | 40, 80 | ELISA | No detectable amount of caseins | [
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| CW | 25 | NS | NS | LC-MS/MS | Detection of caseins in 2 out of 25 wines | [
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| CW | 20 | NS | NS | LC-MS/MS | No detectable amounts of caseins | [
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EW = experimental wines; CW = Commercial wines; CapLC-ESI-MS/MS = Capillary liquid chromatography combined with electrospray ionization-tandem mass spectrometry; ELISA: enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay; DBPCFC: double-blind, placebo controlled food challenge; LC-MS/MS: liquid chromatography coupled with tandem mass spectrometry; NS: not specified; SPT: skin prick test.
Main proteins from isinglass and their allergenic potential.
| Protein | Allergenic Potential | Protein Content ^ |
|---|---|---|
| Parvalbumin | high | 0.2–0.7 mg /kg isinglass |
| Type I + collagen and gelatine as collagen denaturation product | low | 95% dry weight |
| Elastine | low | 2.5% dry weight |
^ Data from EFSA [38].
Studies reporting data on allergenic residues in wines fined with isinglass/fish gelatin.
| Type of Wines | Number of Wines | Fining Agent | Dose (g/hL) | Analytical Method | Results of the Study | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| EW | 4 | Isinglass | 50, 250 mL | ELISA | No detectable amounts of fish gelatine/isinglass | [
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| CW | 23 | Isinglass | NS | DBPCFC | Lack of anaphylaxis and basophil activation | [
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| EW | 5 | Isinglass | 250 mL | DBPCFC | Lack of anaphylaxis | [
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| EW | 4 | Isinglass | 20–25 | ELISA | Detection of isinglass in EW and CW | [
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| EW | 8 | Isinglass | 50, 250 mL ^ | SDS-PAGE, Immunoblotting | Detection of isinglass only in EW not treated with bentonite; | [
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EW = experimental wines; CW = Commercial wines; ELISA: enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay; DBPCFC: double-blind, placebo controlled food challenge; NS: not specified; SPT: skin prick test. ^ With/without bentonite.
Studies reporting data on allergenic residues in wines to which lysozyme has been added.
| Type of Wines | Number of Wines | LYS and Secondary Treatment | Doses (g/hL) | Analytical Method | Results of the Study | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| EW | 4 | LYS + bentonite | 25 and 50 | ELISA | Residues were 0.001–0.06 mg/L | [
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| EW | 5 | LYS + bentonite | 25, 50 | HPLC | Without bentonite fining, the residues of LYS detected in final wines were significantly higher. | [
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| CW | 29 | LYS + Bentonite/metatartaric acid | 5–50 | Electrophoresis/Immunoblotting | Two positive wines with LYS residues of 8.6 mg/L and 2.6 mg/L, respectively; three other wines scored positive at immunoblotting after concentration | [
|
EW = experimental wines; CW = Commercial wines; ELISA: enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay; HPLC: high-performance liquid chromatography; LYS: lysozyme.