Abstract

Recent research suggests that gluten-free beers by prolyl-endopeptidase treatment may not be safe for coeliac disease (CD) patients. Therefore, the gluten peptidome of an industrial gluten-free prolyl-endopeptidase treated malt beer (<10 ppm gluten) was compared to its untreated counterpart (58 ppm gluten) as a reference. NanoLC-HRMS analysis revealed the presence of 155 and 158 gluten peptides in the treated and reference beer, respectively. Characterisation of the peptides in treated beer showed that prolyl-endopeptidase activity was not complete with many peptides containing (multiple) internal proline-residues. Yet, prolyl-endopeptidase treatment did eliminate complete CD-immunogenic motifs, however, 18 peptides still contained partial, and potentially unsafe, motifs. In the reference beer respectively 7 and 37 gluten peptides carried (multiple) complete and/or partial CD-immunogenic motifs. Worrying is that many of these partial immunogenic gluten peptides do not contain a recognition epitope for the R5-antibody and would be overlooked in the current ELISA analysis for gluten quantification.

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