| Literature DB >> 28554633 |
Rinkesh Kumar Gupta1, Alok Raghav2, Akanksha Sharma3, Kriti Gupta4, Payal Mandal3, Anurag Tripathi4, Irfan Ahmad Ansari5, Mukul Das3, Premendra D Dwivedi6.
Abstract
Glycation of food allergens may alter their immunological behaviour. We sought to investigate the impact of glycation on the allergenicity of a food protein. Herein, a chickpea protein (≈26kDa) was purified and characterized as lectin. Further, glycation of this purified protein was carried out. Thereafter, allergic behaviour of this glycated protein was compared with its native form, using various allergic parameters in Balb/c mice. The reduced allergenicity of glycated protein was observed as lesser allergic phenotypes, reduced serum immunoglobulins and allergic mediators, lower mast cells and eosinophil counts, lower protein expressions of Th2 cytokines and associated transcription factors. In addition, more Th1 and less Th2 cytokine production in exposed splenocyte, were evident in the glycated protein treated mice as compared to its native protein treatment. Thus, glycation of the chickpea allergen attenuated the sensitizing potential and allergic responses in Balb/c mice significantly and could also be clinically beneficial.Entities:
Keywords: Acetic acid (PubChem CID: 176); Acetonitrile (PubChem CID: 6342); Allergen; Chickpea; Ethanol (PubChem CID: 702); Food allergy; Formic Acid (PubChem CID: 284); Glycation; Hydrochloric Acid (PubChem CID: 313); Maillard reaction; Sodium Chloride (PubChem CID: 5234); TNBSA dye (PubChem CID: 11045); Trifluoro acetic acid (PubChem CID: 6422); Tris or Tris-(hydroxymethyl)aminomethane (PubChem CID: 4468930); d-Glucose (PubChem CID: 5793)
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28554633 DOI: 10.1016/j.foodchem.2017.05.056
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Food Chem ISSN: 0308-8146 Impact factor: 7.514