Abstract

Abstract Risk-based approaches to managing allergens in foods are being developed by the food industry and regulatory authorities to support food-allergic consumers to avoid ingestion of their problem food, especially in relation to the traces of unintended allergens. The application of such approaches requires access to good quality data from clinical studies to support identification of levels of allergens in foods that are generally safe for most food-allergic consumers as well as analytical tools that are able to quantify allergenic food protein. The ThRAll project aims to support the application of risk-based approaches to food-allergen management in two ways. First, a harmonized quantitative MS-based prototype reference method will be developed for the detection of multiple food allergens in standardized incurred food matrices. This will be undertaken for cow’s milk, hen’s egg, peanut, soybean, hazelnut, and almond incurred into two highly processed food matrices, chocolate and broth powder. This activity is complemented by a second objective to support the development and curation of data on oral food challenges, which are used to define thresholds and minimum eliciting doses. This will be achieved through the development of common protocols for collection and curation of data that will be applied to allergenic foods for which there are currently data gaps.

Highlights

  • HAL is a multi-disciplinary open access archive for the deposit and dissemination of scientific research documents, whether they are published or not

  • Risk-based approaches to managing allergens in foods are being developed by the food industry and regulatory authorities to support food-allergic consumers to avoid ingestion of their problem food, especially in relation to the traces of unintended allergens

  • The ThRAll project builds on the multidisciplinary approaches that have underpinned much of the research undertaken to develop evidence-based approaches to food allergen management, such as EuroPrevall and iFAAM. (40, 41)

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Summary

1: Selection of published peptide markers for ThRAll foods

• > 6 amino acids long • Stable to chemical modification after food processing • Peptides validated in different papers and evaluated in food matrices similar to those used in ThRAll • Specific for each food at a species level checked by BLAST searching against UniProt Knoweldgebase (unreviewed), and the International Nucleotide Sequence Database Collaboration (INSDC) resources

2: Experimental identification of peptide markers
Findings
Conclusions
Full Text
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