Toward the assessment of food toxicity for celiac patients: characterization of monoclonal antibodies to a main immunogenic gluten peptide.

<h4>Background and aims</h4>Celiac disease is a permanent intolerance to gluten prolamins from wheat, barley, rye and, in some patients, oats. Partially digested gluten peptides produced in the digestive tract cause inflammation of the small intestine. High throughput, immune-based assay...

Descripción completa

Guardado en:
Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Belén Morón, Michael T Bethune, Isabel Comino, Hamid Manyani, Marina Ferragud, Manuel Carlos López, Angel Cebolla, Chaitan Khosla, Carolina Sousa
Formato: article
Lenguaje:EN
Publicado: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2008
Materias:
R
Q
Acceso en línea:https://doaj.org/article/220c42c2a9ce4e43a11b75fff741eb8f
Etiquetas: Agregar Etiqueta
Sin Etiquetas, Sea el primero en etiquetar este registro!
id oai:doaj.org-article:220c42c2a9ce4e43a11b75fff741eb8f
record_format dspace
spelling oai:doaj.org-article:220c42c2a9ce4e43a11b75fff741eb8f2021-11-25T06:12:15ZToward the assessment of food toxicity for celiac patients: characterization of monoclonal antibodies to a main immunogenic gluten peptide.1932-620310.1371/journal.pone.0002294https://doaj.org/article/220c42c2a9ce4e43a11b75fff741eb8f2008-05-01T00:00:00Zhttps://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/pmid/18509534/pdf/?tool=EBIhttps://doaj.org/toc/1932-6203<h4>Background and aims</h4>Celiac disease is a permanent intolerance to gluten prolamins from wheat, barley, rye and, in some patients, oats. Partially digested gluten peptides produced in the digestive tract cause inflammation of the small intestine. High throughput, immune-based assays using monoclonal antibodies specific for these immunotoxic peptides would facilitate their detection in food and enable monitoring of their enzymatic detoxification. Two monoclonal antibodies, G12 and A1, were developed against a highly immunotoxic 33-mer peptide. The potential of each antibody for quantifying food toxicity for celiac patients was studied.<h4>Methods</h4>Epitope preferences of G12 and A1 antibodies were determined by ELISA with gluten-derived peptide variants of recombinant, synthetic or enzymatic origin.<h4>Results</h4>The recognition sequences of G12 and A1 antibodies were hexameric and heptameric epitopes, respectively. Although G12 affinity for the 33-mer was superior to A1, the sensitivity for gluten detection was higher for A1. This observation correlated to the higher number of A1 epitopes found in prolamins than G12 epitopes. Activation of T cell from gluten digested by glutenases decreased equivalently to the detection of intact peptides by A1 antibody. Peptide recognition of A1 included gliadin peptides involved in the both the adaptive and innate immunological response in celiac disease.<h4>Conclusions</h4>The sensitivity and epitope preferences of the A1 antibody resulted to be useful to detect gluten relevant peptides to infer the potential toxicity of food for celiac patients as well as to monitor peptide modifications by transglutaminase 2 or glutenases.Belén MorónMichael T BethuneIsabel CominoHamid ManyaniMarina FerragudManuel Carlos LópezAngel CebollaChaitan KhoslaCarolina SousaPublic Library of Science (PLoS)articleMedicineRScienceQENPLoS ONE, Vol 3, Iss 5, p e2294 (2008)
institution DOAJ
collection DOAJ
language EN
topic Medicine
R
Science
Q
spellingShingle Medicine
R
Science
Q
Belén Morón
Michael T Bethune
Isabel Comino
Hamid Manyani
Marina Ferragud
Manuel Carlos López
Angel Cebolla
Chaitan Khosla
Carolina Sousa
Toward the assessment of food toxicity for celiac patients: characterization of monoclonal antibodies to a main immunogenic gluten peptide.
description <h4>Background and aims</h4>Celiac disease is a permanent intolerance to gluten prolamins from wheat, barley, rye and, in some patients, oats. Partially digested gluten peptides produced in the digestive tract cause inflammation of the small intestine. High throughput, immune-based assays using monoclonal antibodies specific for these immunotoxic peptides would facilitate their detection in food and enable monitoring of their enzymatic detoxification. Two monoclonal antibodies, G12 and A1, were developed against a highly immunotoxic 33-mer peptide. The potential of each antibody for quantifying food toxicity for celiac patients was studied.<h4>Methods</h4>Epitope preferences of G12 and A1 antibodies were determined by ELISA with gluten-derived peptide variants of recombinant, synthetic or enzymatic origin.<h4>Results</h4>The recognition sequences of G12 and A1 antibodies were hexameric and heptameric epitopes, respectively. Although G12 affinity for the 33-mer was superior to A1, the sensitivity for gluten detection was higher for A1. This observation correlated to the higher number of A1 epitopes found in prolamins than G12 epitopes. Activation of T cell from gluten digested by glutenases decreased equivalently to the detection of intact peptides by A1 antibody. Peptide recognition of A1 included gliadin peptides involved in the both the adaptive and innate immunological response in celiac disease.<h4>Conclusions</h4>The sensitivity and epitope preferences of the A1 antibody resulted to be useful to detect gluten relevant peptides to infer the potential toxicity of food for celiac patients as well as to monitor peptide modifications by transglutaminase 2 or glutenases.
format article
author Belén Morón
Michael T Bethune
Isabel Comino
Hamid Manyani
Marina Ferragud
Manuel Carlos López
Angel Cebolla
Chaitan Khosla
Carolina Sousa
author_facet Belén Morón
Michael T Bethune
Isabel Comino
Hamid Manyani
Marina Ferragud
Manuel Carlos López
Angel Cebolla
Chaitan Khosla
Carolina Sousa
author_sort Belén Morón
title Toward the assessment of food toxicity for celiac patients: characterization of monoclonal antibodies to a main immunogenic gluten peptide.
title_short Toward the assessment of food toxicity for celiac patients: characterization of monoclonal antibodies to a main immunogenic gluten peptide.
title_full Toward the assessment of food toxicity for celiac patients: characterization of monoclonal antibodies to a main immunogenic gluten peptide.
title_fullStr Toward the assessment of food toxicity for celiac patients: characterization of monoclonal antibodies to a main immunogenic gluten peptide.
title_full_unstemmed Toward the assessment of food toxicity for celiac patients: characterization of monoclonal antibodies to a main immunogenic gluten peptide.
title_sort toward the assessment of food toxicity for celiac patients: characterization of monoclonal antibodies to a main immunogenic gluten peptide.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
publishDate 2008
url https://doaj.org/article/220c42c2a9ce4e43a11b75fff741eb8f
work_keys_str_mv AT belenmoron towardtheassessmentoffoodtoxicityforceliacpatientscharacterizationofmonoclonalantibodiestoamainimmunogenicglutenpeptide
AT michaeltbethune towardtheassessmentoffoodtoxicityforceliacpatientscharacterizationofmonoclonalantibodiestoamainimmunogenicglutenpeptide
AT isabelcomino towardtheassessmentoffoodtoxicityforceliacpatientscharacterizationofmonoclonalantibodiestoamainimmunogenicglutenpeptide
AT hamidmanyani towardtheassessmentoffoodtoxicityforceliacpatientscharacterizationofmonoclonalantibodiestoamainimmunogenicglutenpeptide
AT marinaferragud towardtheassessmentoffoodtoxicityforceliacpatientscharacterizationofmonoclonalantibodiestoamainimmunogenicglutenpeptide
AT manuelcarloslopez towardtheassessmentoffoodtoxicityforceliacpatientscharacterizationofmonoclonalantibodiestoamainimmunogenicglutenpeptide
AT angelcebolla towardtheassessmentoffoodtoxicityforceliacpatientscharacterizationofmonoclonalantibodiestoamainimmunogenicglutenpeptide
AT chaitankhosla towardtheassessmentoffoodtoxicityforceliacpatientscharacterizationofmonoclonalantibodiestoamainimmunogenicglutenpeptide
AT carolinasousa towardtheassessmentoffoodtoxicityforceliacpatientscharacterizationofmonoclonalantibodiestoamainimmunogenicglutenpeptide
_version_ 1718414030256734208