Allergenicity of Deamidated and/or Peptide-Bond-Hydrolyzed Wheat Gliadin by Transdermal Administration.

HCl treatment cutaneous sensitization deamidation peptide-bond hydrolysis wheat gliadin

Journal

Foods (Basel, Switzerland)
ISSN: 2304-8158
Titre abrégé: Foods
Pays: Switzerland
ID NLM: 101670569

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
15 May 2020
Historique:
received: 21 04 2020
revised: 08 05 2020
accepted: 12 05 2020
entrez: 21 5 2020
pubmed: 21 5 2020
medline: 21 5 2020
Statut: epublish

Résumé

Hydrochloric acid (HCl)-treated wheat protein (HWP) is widely used in various products, including foods, cosmetics and shampoos. Recently, immediate hypersensitivity towards facial soap containing HWP has been reported. HCl treatment of protein causes hydrolysis not only of main-chain amide bonds (peptide-bond hydrolysis) but also of side-chain ones (deamidation). We have already reported that gliadin, the main allergen in wheat, reduces allergenicity and increases digestibility by deamidation, indicating that deamidation and peptide-bond hydrolysis are effective to reduce the allergenicity of wheat protein. However, transdermally administered HWP is assumed to induce sensitization to orally administered wheat protein even in those who have been taking wheat products daily before sensitization. The present study was conducted to examine which structural change is responsible for the induction of cutaneous sensitization by comparing the allergenicity of deamidated and/or peptide-bond-hydrolyzed wheat gliadin. Because we have developed a deamidation method without causing peptide-bond hydrolysis, only deamidated wheat gliadin is available. Therefore, after deamidated-only, hydrolyzed-only, and deamidated and hydrolyzed gliadins were transdermally administered to mice for several weeks, the corresponding gliadin was intraperitoneally administered and allergenicity was evaluated. Transdermal administration of deamidated and hydrolyzed gliadin induced severe allergic reaction, while that of deamidated-only and hydrolyzed-only gliadin showed almost no allergic response. This result indicates that both deamidation and peptide-bond hydrolysis are necessary to increase the allergenic potency of transdermally administered wheat gliadin.

Identifiants

pubmed: 32429096
pii: foods9050635
doi: 10.3390/foods9050635
pmc: PMC7278741
pii:
doi:

Types de publication

Journal Article

Langues

eng

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Auteurs

Ryosuke Abe (R)

Department of Chemistry and Life Science, Nihon University, 1866 Kameino, Fujisawa-shi, Kanagawa 252-0880, Japan.

Narumi Matsukaze (N)

Department of Chemistry and Life Science, Nihon University, 1866 Kameino, Fujisawa-shi, Kanagawa 252-0880, Japan.

Hayato Kobayashi (H)

Department of Chemistry and Life Science, Nihon University, 1866 Kameino, Fujisawa-shi, Kanagawa 252-0880, Japan.

Yusuke Yamaguchi (Y)

Department of Chemistry and Life Science, Nihon University, 1866 Kameino, Fujisawa-shi, Kanagawa 252-0880, Japan.

Harumi Uto-Kondo (H)

Department of Bioscience in Daily Life, Nihon University, 1866 Kameino, Fujisawa-shi, Kanagawa 252-0880, Japan.

Hitoshi Kumagai (H)

Department of Food Science and Nutrition, Kyoritsu Women's University, 2-2-1 Hitotsubashi, Chiyoda-ku, Tokyo 101-8347, Japan.

Hitomi Kumagai (H)

Department of Chemistry and Life Science, Nihon University, 1866 Kameino, Fujisawa-shi, Kanagawa 252-0880, Japan.

Classifications MeSH