| Literature DB >> 32258047 |
Katharina A Scherf1, Carlo Catassi2, Fernando Chirdo3, Paul J Ciclitira4, Conleth Feighery5, Carmen Gianfrani6, Frits Koning7, Knut E A Lundin8, Detlef Schuppan9, Marinus J M Smulders10, Olivier Tranquet11, Riccardo Troncone12, Peter Koehler13.
Abstract
Celiac disease (CD) affects a growing number of individuals worldwide. To elucidate the causes for this increase, future multidisciplinary collaboration is key to understanding the interactions between immunoreactive components in gluten-containing cereals and the human gastrointestinal tract and immune system and to devise strategies for CD prevention and treatment beyond the gluten-free diet. During the last meetings, the Working Group on Prolamin Analysis and Toxicity (Prolamin Working Group, PWG) discussed recent progress in the field together with key stakeholders from celiac disease societies, academia, industry and regulatory bodies. Based on the current state of knowledge, this perspective from the PWG members provides recommendations regarding clinical, analytical and legal aspects of CD. The selected key topics that require future multidisciplinary collaborative efforts in the clinical field are to collect robust data on the increasing prevalence of CD, to evaluate what is special about gluten-specific T cells, to study their kinetics and transcriptomics and to put some attention to the identification of the environmental agents that facilitate the breaking of tolerance to gluten. In the field of gluten analysis, the key topics are the precise assessment of gluten immunoreactive components in wheat, rye and barley to understand how these are affected by genetic and environmental factors, the comparison of different methods for compliance monitoring of gluten-free products and the development of improved reference materials for gluten analysis.Entities:
Keywords: Prolamin Working Group; barley; celiac disease; gluten; gluten-free diet; rye; wheat
Year: 2020 PMID: 32258047 PMCID: PMC7090026 DOI: 10.3389/fnut.2020.00029
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Nutr ISSN: 2296-861X
Method performance requirements for gluten ELISAs.
| Analytical range (mg/kg) | 5–100 |
| Limit of detection (LOD) (mg/kg) | 3 |
| Limit of quantitation (LOQ) (mg/kg) | 10 |
| Recovery (%) | 80–120 |
| Repeatability relative standard deviation (RSDr) (%) | 20 |
| Reproducibility relative standard deviation (RSDR) (%) | 30 |
Suggested matrix categories and examples for foods from each category.
| Protein-based | Coated meat, sausage, protein isolate/concentrate |
| Starch-based | Starch, baked goods, sauce |
| Fat-based | Cookie, cake, ice cream |
| Polyphenol-rich | Chocolate cake, cocoa powder, beer |
| Fiber-rich | Cereal bran, breakfast cereals, legume seed flours |