Food Processing and Allergenicity

Food processing can have many beneficial effects. However, processing may also alter the allergenic properties of food proteins. A wide variety of processing methods is available and their use depends largely on the food to be processed.In this review the impact of processing (heat and non-heat treatment) on the allergenic potential of proteins, and on the antigenic (IgG-binding) and allergenic (IgE-binding) properties of proteins has been considered. A variety of allergenic foods (peanuts, tree nuts, cows' milk, hens' eggs, soy, wheat and mustard) have been reviewed.The overall conclusion drawn is that processing does not completely abolish the allergenic potential of allergens. Currently, only fermentation and hydrolysis may have potential to reduce allergenicity to such an extent that symptoms will not be elicited, while other methods might be promising but need more data. Literature on the effect of processing on allergenic potential and the ability to induce sensitisation is scarce. This is an important issue since processing may impact on the ability of proteins to cause the acquisition of allergic sensitisation, and the subject should be a focus of future research. Also, there remains a need to develop robust and integrated methods for the risk assessment of food allergenicity.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Verhoeckx, K., Vissers, Y., Baumert, J.L., Faludi, R., Fleys, M., Flanagan, S., Herouet-Guicheney, C., Holzhauser, T., Shimojo, R., van der Bolt, Nieke, Wichers, H.J., Kimber, I.
Format: Article/Letter to editor biblioteca
Language:English
Subjects:Allergenicity, Allergic sensitisation, Food allergy, Food processing, IgE antibody,
Online Access:https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/food-processing-and-allergenicity
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spelling dig-wur-nl-wurpubs-4967182024-12-04 Verhoeckx, K. Vissers, Y. Baumert, J.L. Faludi, R. Fleys, M. Flanagan, S. Herouet-Guicheney, C. Holzhauser, T. Shimojo, R. van der Bolt, Nieke Wichers, H.J. Kimber, I. Article/Letter to editor Food and Chemical Toxicology 80 (2015) ISSN: 0278-6915 Food Processing and Allergenicity 2015 Food processing can have many beneficial effects. However, processing may also alter the allergenic properties of food proteins. A wide variety of processing methods is available and their use depends largely on the food to be processed.In this review the impact of processing (heat and non-heat treatment) on the allergenic potential of proteins, and on the antigenic (IgG-binding) and allergenic (IgE-binding) properties of proteins has been considered. A variety of allergenic foods (peanuts, tree nuts, cows' milk, hens' eggs, soy, wheat and mustard) have been reviewed.The overall conclusion drawn is that processing does not completely abolish the allergenic potential of allergens. Currently, only fermentation and hydrolysis may have potential to reduce allergenicity to such an extent that symptoms will not be elicited, while other methods might be promising but need more data. Literature on the effect of processing on allergenic potential and the ability to induce sensitisation is scarce. This is an important issue since processing may impact on the ability of proteins to cause the acquisition of allergic sensitisation, and the subject should be a focus of future research. Also, there remains a need to develop robust and integrated methods for the risk assessment of food allergenicity. en application/pdf https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/food-processing-and-allergenicity 10.1016/j.fct.2015.03.005 https://edepot.wur.nl/372876 Allergenicity Allergic sensitisation Food allergy Food processing IgE antibody https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ Wageningen University & Research
institution WUR NL
collection DSpace
country Países bajos
countrycode NL
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-wur-nl
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Oeste
libraryname WUR Library Netherlands
language English
topic Allergenicity
Allergic sensitisation
Food allergy
Food processing
IgE antibody
Allergenicity
Allergic sensitisation
Food allergy
Food processing
IgE antibody
spellingShingle Allergenicity
Allergic sensitisation
Food allergy
Food processing
IgE antibody
Allergenicity
Allergic sensitisation
Food allergy
Food processing
IgE antibody
Verhoeckx, K.
Vissers, Y.
Baumert, J.L.
Faludi, R.
Fleys, M.
Flanagan, S.
Herouet-Guicheney, C.
Holzhauser, T.
Shimojo, R.
van der Bolt, Nieke
Wichers, H.J.
Kimber, I.
Food Processing and Allergenicity
description Food processing can have many beneficial effects. However, processing may also alter the allergenic properties of food proteins. A wide variety of processing methods is available and their use depends largely on the food to be processed.In this review the impact of processing (heat and non-heat treatment) on the allergenic potential of proteins, and on the antigenic (IgG-binding) and allergenic (IgE-binding) properties of proteins has been considered. A variety of allergenic foods (peanuts, tree nuts, cows' milk, hens' eggs, soy, wheat and mustard) have been reviewed.The overall conclusion drawn is that processing does not completely abolish the allergenic potential of allergens. Currently, only fermentation and hydrolysis may have potential to reduce allergenicity to such an extent that symptoms will not be elicited, while other methods might be promising but need more data. Literature on the effect of processing on allergenic potential and the ability to induce sensitisation is scarce. This is an important issue since processing may impact on the ability of proteins to cause the acquisition of allergic sensitisation, and the subject should be a focus of future research. Also, there remains a need to develop robust and integrated methods for the risk assessment of food allergenicity.
format Article/Letter to editor
topic_facet Allergenicity
Allergic sensitisation
Food allergy
Food processing
IgE antibody
author Verhoeckx, K.
Vissers, Y.
Baumert, J.L.
Faludi, R.
Fleys, M.
Flanagan, S.
Herouet-Guicheney, C.
Holzhauser, T.
Shimojo, R.
van der Bolt, Nieke
Wichers, H.J.
Kimber, I.
author_facet Verhoeckx, K.
Vissers, Y.
Baumert, J.L.
Faludi, R.
Fleys, M.
Flanagan, S.
Herouet-Guicheney, C.
Holzhauser, T.
Shimojo, R.
van der Bolt, Nieke
Wichers, H.J.
Kimber, I.
author_sort Verhoeckx, K.
title Food Processing and Allergenicity
title_short Food Processing and Allergenicity
title_full Food Processing and Allergenicity
title_fullStr Food Processing and Allergenicity
title_full_unstemmed Food Processing and Allergenicity
title_sort food processing and allergenicity
url https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/food-processing-and-allergenicity
work_keys_str_mv AT verhoeckxk foodprocessingandallergenicity
AT vissersy foodprocessingandallergenicity
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AT faludir foodprocessingandallergenicity
AT fleysm foodprocessingandallergenicity
AT flanagans foodprocessingandallergenicity
AT herouetguicheneyc foodprocessingandallergenicity
AT holzhausert foodprocessingandallergenicity
AT shimojor foodprocessingandallergenicity
AT vanderboltnieke foodprocessingandallergenicity
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