Efficient degradation of gluten by a prolyl endoprotease in a gastrointestinal model: implications for coeliac disease
- 1Department of Immunohematology and Blood Transfusion, Leiden University Medical Center, Leiden, the Netherlands
- 2TNO Quality of Life, Zeist, the Netherlands
- 3DSM Food Specialties, Delft, the Netherlands
- Dr E H A Dekking, Department of Immunohematology and Blood Transfusion, E3-Q, Leiden University Medical Center, PO Box 9600, 2300 RC Leiden, The Netherlands; e.h.a.dekking{at}lumc.nl
- Revised 8 March 2007
- Accepted 24 April 2007
- Published Online First 9 May 2007
Abstract
Background: Coeliac disease is caused by an immune response to gluten. As gluten proteins are proline rich they are resistant to enzymatic digestion in the gastrointestinal tract, a property that probably contributes to the immunogenic nature of gluten.
Aims: This study determined the efficiency of gluten degradation by a post-proline cutting enzyme, Aspergillus niger prolyl endoprotease (AN-PEP), in a dynamic system that closely mimics the human gastrointestinal tract (TIM system).
Methods: Two experiments were performed. In the first, a slice of bread was processed in the TIM system with and without co-administration of AN-PEP. In the second, a standard fast food menu was used. Samples of the digesting meals were taken from the stomach, duodenum, jejunum and ileum compartments at time zero until 4 hours after the start of the experiment. In these samples the levels of immunogenic peptides from gliadins and glutenins were assessed by monoclonal antibody-based competition assays, Western blot analysis and proliferation T-cell assays.
Results: AN-PEP accelerated the degradation of gluten in the stomach compartment to such an extent that hardly any gluten reached the duodenum compartment.
Conclusion: AN-PEP is capable of accelerating the degradation of gluten in a gastrointestinal system that closely mimics in-vivo digestion. This implies that the co-administration of AN-PEP with a gluten-containing meal might eliminate gluten toxicity, thus offering patients the possibility of abandoning (occasionally) their strict gluten-free diet.
Footnotes
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Funding: This study was supported by the Celiac Disease Consortium, an Innovative Cluster approved by the Netherlands Genomics Initiative and partly funded by the Dutch Government (BSIK03009)
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Competing interests: Declared (the declaration can be viewed on the Gut website at http://www.gutjnl.com/content/vol57/issue1).









