Barley based gluten free beer – A blessing or an uncontrollable risk?

Recent reports have highlighted that beer labelled “gluten-free”, crafted with enzymatic treatments to remove gluten, may contain polypeptides that could be immunotoxic to individuals with coeliac disease. As strict adherence to a gluten-free diet is the only way to manage this condition, accurate l...

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Veröffentlicht in:Food and chemical toxicology 2024-11, Vol.193, p.115019, Article 115019
Hauptverfasser: Cubero-Leon, Elena, Madsen, Charlotte B., Scherf, Katharina A., Colgrave, Michelle L., Nørgaard, Jørgen V., Anthoni, Minna, Rizou, Katerina, Walker, Michael J., Sollid, Ludvig M.
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container_end_page
container_issue
container_start_page 115019
container_title Food and chemical toxicology
container_volume 193
creator Cubero-Leon, Elena
Madsen, Charlotte B.
Scherf, Katharina A.
Colgrave, Michelle L.
Nørgaard, Jørgen V.
Anthoni, Minna
Rizou, Katerina
Walker, Michael J.
Sollid, Ludvig M.
description Recent reports have highlighted that beer labelled “gluten-free”, crafted with enzymatic treatments to remove gluten, may contain polypeptides that could be immunotoxic to individuals with coeliac disease. As strict adherence to a gluten-free diet is the only way to manage this condition, accurate labelling is crucial to those with coeliac disease. This paper aims to discuss the presence, levels and immunogenicity of gluten peptides found in gluten-reduced barley beers. While advances have been made in the detection and quantification of gluten peptides in beer, there are still challenges to the interpretation of gluten measurements as well as to assess whether peptides are immunotoxic in vivo. To make progress, future efforts should involve a combination of in vivo toxicity assessment of the degraded proteins, development of standardised gluten-free production strategies to minimise variability in gluten fragment presence, guidance on how to control the outcome as well as to develop appropriate reference materials and calibrators. [Display omitted] •Challenges remain to the interpretation of gluten measurements in beer.•Future progress requires: in vivo toxicity assessment of the degraded proteins.•Development of standardised gluten-free production strategies and control guidelines.•Appropriate reference materials and calibrators based on the above findings.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.fct.2024.115019
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As strict adherence to a gluten-free diet is the only way to manage this condition, accurate labelling is crucial to those with coeliac disease. This paper aims to discuss the presence, levels and immunogenicity of gluten peptides found in gluten-reduced barley beers. While advances have been made in the detection and quantification of gluten peptides in beer, there are still challenges to the interpretation of gluten measurements as well as to assess whether peptides are immunotoxic in vivo. To make progress, future efforts should involve a combination of in vivo toxicity assessment of the degraded proteins, development of standardised gluten-free production strategies to minimise variability in gluten fragment presence, guidance on how to control the outcome as well as to develop appropriate reference materials and calibrators. 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language eng
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subjects barley
Beer - analysis
beers
celiac disease
Celiac Disease - diet therapy
Coeliac disease
Diet, Gluten-Free
gluten
Gluten quantification
Gluten-free beer
gluten-free diet
Glutens - analysis
Hordeum - chemistry
Humans
Hydrolysis
immunogenicity
immunotoxicity
polypeptides
Reference materials
Review
risk
Risk assessment
title Barley based gluten free beer – A blessing or an uncontrollable risk?
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