Abstract

Celiac disease is a gluten-induced hypersensitivity reaction that requires a lifelong gluten-free diet. Gluten-free foods must not contain more than 20 mg/kg gluten as laid down by Codex Alimentarius. Measuring the presence of gluten with routine immunoanalytical methods in food is a serious challenge as many factors affect accurate determination. Comparability of the results obtained with different methods and method validation are hindered by the lack of a widely accepted reference material (RM). The core questions of RM development from wheat are the number of cultivars to be included and the format of gluten (i.e., flour, gluten, or gliadin isolates) to be applied. Therefore, the aim of our work was to produce an appropriate gluten RM from wheat. For this, five previously selected wheat cultivars and their blend were used to produce flours, gluten and gliadin isolates under laboratory conditions. Protein content, protein composition and responses to different ELISA methods were compared and widely evaluated in our study. The protein contents of the flours were 12.1–18.7%, those of the gluten isolates 93.8–97.4% and those of the gliadin isolates 72.7–101.9%. The gluten and gliadin isolates had similar protein profiles as the source flours. By comparing the different wheat cultivars and their protein isolates, we found that the isolation had a smaller effect on protein composition than genetic variability. The choice of a blend would be more suitable for the production of a RM in case of flours and also isolates. The immunoanalytical results showed that the isolation had an effect on the analytical results, but its extent depended on the ELISA method. The use of flour would be more applicable in this regard, but handling of the material and long-term stability should also be considered in the final decision of gluten RM production.

Highlights

  • Wheat, rye, and barley are widely used cereals in the food industry because of their nutritional quality and beneficial technological properties (Shewry and Tatham, 2016)

  • In this work we investigated the effect that the production of protein isolates from wheat flour has on the amount and composition of proteins compared to the flour

  • We produced two independent batches from the cultivar “Akteur” in parallel with a method based on preliminary experiments and all protein parameters of each type of sample were investigated

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Summary

Introduction

Rye, and barley are widely used cereals in the food industry because of their nutritional quality and beneficial technological properties (Shewry and Tatham, 2016). Their consumption can cause health problems for some people. The typical repetitive amino acid sequences (epitopes) of wheat gluten proteins, examples of which are given in parentheses, are involved in the induction of celiac disease. These sequences have high contents of proline and glutamine, which make them resistant to protein-degrading digestive enzymes (Brouns et al, 2019). Further studies have shown that other gluten protein types contain celiac disease-active epitopes (Lexhaller et al, 2019; Sollid et al, 2020)

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