| Literature DB >> 28231153 |
Nina G Heredia-Sandoval1, Maribel Y Valencia-Tapia2, Ana M Calderón de la Barca3, Alma R Islas-Rubio4.
Abstract
Gluten-related diseases are a range of inflammatory disorders of the small intestine, characterized by an adverse response to gluten ingestion; therefore, the treatment is a gluten withdrawal. In spite of the increased market of gluten-free products, widely available breads with high acceptability are still missing due to the technological challenge of substituting the special gluten properties. Instead of using alternative ingredients for baking, some attempts have been done to decrease gluten immunogenicity by its enzymatic degradation with microbial proteases. Although the gluten immunogenicity reduction has been reached to an acceptable level, some quality parameters of the products are affected. This review focus on the use of microbial peptidases to prepare less immunogenic baked goods and their effect on product quality.Entities:
Keywords: baked products; gluten-free; immunogenicity; microbial proteases; product quality
Year: 2016 PMID: 28231153 PMCID: PMC5302405 DOI: 10.3390/foods5030059
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Foods ISSN: 2304-8158
Summary of studies on gluten modification by microbial proteases for baked product development.
| Target of Modification | Microbial Enzyme Source | Gluten Content after Modification | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Wheat flour | ND 1 | [ | |
| Wheat flour | <12 mg/kg (in sourdough). | [ | |
| Wheat flour | 1106 mg/kg (in treated flour) | [ | |
| Wheat flour | <10 mg/kg (in sweet baked goods). | [ | |
| Wheat flour | Pool 1: | 2480 mg/kg (Pool 1) and <10 mg/kg; (Fungal proteases, Pool 1 and 2) (in biscuits and cakes). | [ |
| Wheat flour | 20000–76431 mg/kg (in sourdough bread). | [ | |
| Rye flour | 8–532 mg/kg (in rye treated flour). | [ |
1 ND: Not determinated.
Figure 1Adaptive immune response to: (a) non-modified baked goods; (b) and non-activation of T cells to modified baked goods by microbial proteases. Abbreviation: APC: antigen-presenting cell.