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From: Kofi on 8 Jun 2007 02:20 One mystery about allergies is how food allergens can survive the transit through the stomach to cause trouble when they meet the immune system in the intestines. Many previous studies have suggested that allergens can't survive the harsh mixture of acid and pepsin in the stomach, however this new study explains how they can do it though both in vitro and in vivo human studies. The pectin in fruit appears to protect allergens against the stomach's corrosive environment. This may explain the advice given to people with yeast problems to eat fruits separately from other foods like meats. The traditional reason for this advice is that meats and fruits have a different pH but I think the protective effect of pectin may play a bigger role. Clin Exp Allergy. 2007 May;37(5):764-71. Links A matrix effect in pectin-rich fruits hampers digestion of allergen by pepsin in vivo and in vitro. Polovic N, Blanusa M, Gavrovic-Jankulovic M, Atanaskovic-Markovic M, Burazer L, Jankov R, Cirkovic Velickovic T. Department of Biochemistry, Faculty of Chemistry, University of Belgrade, Belgrade, Serbia. BACKGROUND: It is a general belief that a food allergen should be stable to gastric digestion. Various acidic plant polysaccharides, including pectin, are ubiquitous in fruit matrixes and can form hydrogels under low-pH conditions. OBJECTIVE: The purpose of this study was to investigate the effect of hydrogel forming polysaccharide-rich fruit matrixes on in vivo gastric and in vitro pepsic digestion of fruit allergens. METHODS: Fruit extract proteins (kiwi, banana, apple and cherry) and a purified major kiwi allergen Act c 2 were digested with simulated gastric fluid in accordance with the US Pharmacopeia. In vivo experiments on kiwi fruit digestion were performed on four healthy non-atopic volunteers by examining the gastric content 1 h after ingestion of kiwi fruit. The Act c 2 and kiwi proteins were detected in immunoblots using monoclonal anti-Act c 2 antibodies and rabbit polyclonal antisera. RESULTS: Crude fruit extracts were resistant to digestion by pepsin when compared with commonly prepared extracts. In the gastric content of all volunteers, following kiwi fruit ingestion and immunoblotting, intact Act c 2 was detected with anti-Act c 2 monoclonal antibodies, while kiwi proteins of higher molecular weights were detected using rabbit polyclonal antisera. Addition of apple fruit pectin (1.5% and 3%) to the purified kiwi allergen was able to protect it from pepsin digestion in vitro. CONCLUSION: The matrix effect in pectin-rich fruits can influence the digestibility of food proteins and thereby the process of allergic sensitization in atopic individuals. PMID: 17456224 [PubMed - in process] |