Literature DB >> 32846622

In vitro gastroduodenal and jejunal brush border membrane digestion of raw and roasted tree nuts.

Luigia Di Stasio1, Antonio d'Acierno2, Gianluca Picariello2, Pasquale Ferranti3, Chiara Nitride3, Gianfranco Mamone4.   

Abstract

Heat treatments induce chemical/physical modifications, which may affect the stability to enzymatic digestion and consequently the allergenicity of food proteins to a varying extent, depending on the time/temperature regimen. Herein, we evaluated the stability to digestion of whole tree nut (walnuts, hazelnuts and almonds) allergens in a food digestion model reflecting the real one by, taking into consideration the allergen-containing processed (roasted) food. To this aim, whole raw and roasted tree nuts were subjected to in vitro digestion combining the harmonized oral-gastric-duodenal digestion models with brush border membrane enzymes (BBM) to simulate the jejunal degradation of peptides. The degradation of allergens was monitored by integrated proteomic/peptidomic and bio-informatic tools. Roasting increased digestibility of tree nuts, since very few peptides were detected in digested samples (<6.5 kDa fraction). After BBM digestion step, the degradation of peptides was enhanced in roasted walnuts and hazelnuts compared to the raw counterpart. Conversely, almond allergens showed a different behaviour, since the presence of resistant peptides was more evident for roasted almonds, probably because of the hydrolysis of high molecular weight aggregates generated during roasting. Our results provide new insight into the relationship between thermal processing and metabolic fate of tree nut allergens, highlighting the importance of investigating the digestion stability of whole allergenic food, rather than purified proteins.
Copyright © 2020 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Almonds; Brush border membrane enzymes; Food matrix; Hazelnuts; In vitro digestion; Roasting; Tree nut allergy; Walnuts

Mesh:

Year:  2020        PMID: 32846622     DOI: 10.1016/j.foodres.2020.109597

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Food Res Int        ISSN: 0963-9969            Impact factor:   6.475


  1 in total

1.  Mass spectrometric analysis of digesta does not improve the allergenicity assessment of GM crops.

Authors:  Rod A Herman; Patricia A Bauman; Laurie Goodwin; Emir Islamovic; Eric H Ma; Hector Serrano; Andre Silvanovich; Abigail R Simmons; Ping Song; Afua O Tetteh; Rong Wang
Journal:  Transgenic Res       Date:  2021-04-16       Impact factor: 2.788

  1 in total

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