| Literature DB >> 33934031 |
Laura De Marchi1, Federica Mainente1, Massimo Leonardi1, Stephan Scheurer2, Andrea Wangorsch2, Vera Mahler3, Rosa Pilolli4, Daniela Sorio1, Gianni Zoccatelli5.
Abstract
The allergenic potency of the cricket Acheta domesticus, a promising edible insect, has never been assessed. This work aims to study the immunoreactivity of Acheta domesticus, and its cross-reactivity with the shrimp Litopenaeus vannamei, assessing the effect of cooking and gastrointestinal digestion on their allergenic properties. Different cricket proteins were detected by immunoblotting with shrimp-allergic patients' sera. Tropomyosin was identified as the most relevant IgE-binding protein, and its cross-reactivity with shrimp tropomyosin was demonstrated by ELISA. While shrimp tropomyosin showed scarce stability to gastric digestion, cricket tropomyosin withstood the whole digestion process. The sarcoplasmic calcium-binding protein, specifically detected in shrimp, showed exceptional stability to gastrointestinal digestion. IgE-binding proteins in a model of enriched baked products were partially protected from proteolysis. In conclusion, the ingestion of A. domesticus proteins poses serious concerns to the Crustacean-allergic population. The high stability of tropomyosin may represent a risk of primary sensitization and clinical cross-reactivity.Entities:
Keywords: Acheta domesticus; Edible insects; Food allergy; Food processing; Novel food; Simulated gastrointestinal digestion; Tropomyosin
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Year: 2021 PMID: 33934031 DOI: 10.1016/j.foodchem.2021.129878
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Food Chem ISSN: 0308-8146 Impact factor: 7.514