| Literature DB >> 31810336 |
Claudia E Osorio1, Jaime H Mejías2, Sachin Rustgi3,4.
Abstract
Celiac disease, wheat sensitivity, and allergy represent three different reactions, which may occur in genetically predisposed individuals on the ingestion of wheat and derived products with various manifestations. Improvements in the disease diagnostics and understanding of disease etiology unveiled that these disorders are widespread around the globe affecting about 7% of the population. The only known treatment so far is a life-long gluten-free diet, which is almost impossible to follow because of the contamination of allegedly "gluten-free" products. Accidental contamination of inherently gluten-free products could take place at any level from field to shelf because of the ubiquity of these proteins/grains. Gluten contamination of allegedly "gluten-free" products is a constant threat to celiac patients and a major health concern. Several detection procedures have been proposed to determine the level of contamination in products for celiac patients. The present article aims to review the advantages and disadvantages of different gluten detection methods, with emphasis on the recent technology that allows identification of the immunogenic-gluten peptides without the use of antibodies. The possibility to detect gluten contamination by different approaches with similar or better detection efficiency in different raw and processed foods will guarantee the safety of the foods for celiac patients.Entities:
Keywords: aptamers; celiac disease; food labeling; gluten contamination; gluten detection; prolamins; wheat
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31810336 PMCID: PMC6949940 DOI: 10.3390/nu11122920
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nutrients ISSN: 2072-6643 Impact factor: 5.717
A list of commonly available gluten detection kits, associated antibodies, target proteins, detection procedures, and extraction systems.
| Company | Neogen Corp. | R-Biopharm AG | R-Biopharm AG | Inmunología y Genética Aplicada SA | Romer Labs | Tepnel Biosystem | Morinaga Inc. |
| Product | Veratox | RIDA- | Ridascreen® Gliadin Competitive | INgezim Gluten | AgraQuant® Gluten G12 | Gluten assay | Wheat protein |
| Antibody | 2 mAb | R5 mAb | R5 mAb | R5 mAb | G12 mAb | Skerritt mAb | Wheat pAb |
| ELISA type | Sandwich | Sandwich | Competitive | Sandwich | Sandwich | Sandwich | Sandwich |
| Time | 30 min | 1.5 h | 40 min | 60 min | 60 min | 30 min | 2.5 h |
| Target | gliadin | ω, α/β- & γ-gliadins and LMWg | ω, α/β- & γ-gliadins and LMWg | ω, α/β- & γ-gliadins and LMWg | α gliadins | ω gliadins and HMWg | Wheat proteins |
| Antigen | |||||||
| LOD (mg/kg) | n/a | 3 | 1.36 | 3 | 2 | 1 | 0.3 |
| LOQ (mg/kg) | 10 | 5 | 5 | 10 | 4 | 10 | 3.12 |
Comparison of aptamers and antibodies based on properties.
| Properties | Aptamers | Antibodies | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Affinity | Very high target affinity, dissociation constants from micro to picomolar range. | Lower target affinity except for some monoclonal antibodies. | [ |
| Immunogenic effect | Independent of immunogenic effect, due to their in vitro production. | Immune response can fail when the target molecule, has a structure similar to an endogenous protein. | [ |
| Specificity | High binding specificity, e.g., the Anti-theophyllin aptamer displayed 10,000-fold discrimination against caffeine (Theophyllin differs from caffeine by a single methyl group). | Depends on target type. | [ |
| Production | In vitro. | In vivo. Use of animals or cell lines. | [ |
| Consistency | Chemical synthesis, extreme accuracy, and reproducibility. Little or no batch-to-batch variation. | May have in vivo variations. Restricted to environmental conditions. | [ |
| Properties | Can be optimized on demand for increasing binding affinity and specificity. | Properties cannot be changed on demand. | [ |
| Stability | Undergo denaturation, but reversible within minutes. | Irreversible denaturation. Stable under physiological conditions | [ |
| Range of targets | Combinatorial library can be produced against any type of target, even toxic targets. | Restricted to molecules that produce immunogenic effect. | [ |
| Shelf-life | Stable to long-term storage at ambient temperature. | Limited shelf-life. | [ |
| Functionalization | Labeling does not affect affinity. | Attachment of molecules can cause loss in affinity. | [ |
Figure 1Schematic representation of the different steps in the systematic evolution of ligands by exponential enrichment (SELEX) procedure, modified from Banerjee [136] and Stoltenburg et al. [125,133].