Randomised clinical study: Aspergillus niger-derived enzyme digests gluten in the stomach of healthy volunteers.

Alimentary pharmacology & therapeutics. 2015;42(3):273-85

Plain language summary

Gluten is high in proline, an amino acid that is not naturally broken down in the human gastrointestinal tract. In patients with coeliac disease, proline-rich gluten reaches the small intestine and triggers an abnormal immune response, causing inflammation and microvilli damage. The aim of this randomised study was to test the efficacy of Aspergillus niger prolyl endoprotease (AN-PEP) on gluten degradation. AN-PEP belongs to a family of enzymes that has been previously known to break down proline in vitro. The study included 12 healthy volunteers aged 18-45 who were administered a low or high calorie meal containing 4.0g of gluten protein, with AN-PEP or placebo into the stomach. The findings of this study showed that AN-PEP significantly enhanced gluten digestion in the stomach before entering the duodenum of healthy volunteers. Based on this study, the authors conclude that AN-PEP is a promising option for degrading inadvertent dietary gluten consumption, and should be evaluated in target populations.

Abstract

BACKGROUND Aspergillus niger prolyl endoprotease (AN-PEP) efficiently degrades gluten molecules into non-immunogenic peptides in vitro. AIM: To assess the efficacy of AN-PEP on gluten degradation in a low and high calorie meal in healthy subjects. METHODS In this randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled, cross-over study 12 healthy volunteers attended to four test days. A liquid low or high calorie meal (4 g gluten) with AN-PEP or placebo was administered into the stomach. Via a triple-lumen catheter gastric and duodenal aspirates were sampled, and polyethylene glycol (PEG)-3350 was continuously infused. Acetaminophen in the meals tracked gastric emptying time. Gastric and duodenal samples were used to calculate 240-min area under the curve (AUC0-240 min ) of ?-gliadin concentrations. Absolute ?-gliadin AUC0-240 min was calculated using duodenal PEG-3350 concentrations. RESULTS AN-PEP lowered α-gliadin concentration AUC0-240 min, compared to placebo, from low and high calorie meals in stomach (low: 35 vs. 389 μg × min/mL; high: 53 vs. 386 μg × min/mL; P < 0.001) and duodenum (low: 7 vs. 168 μg × min/mL; high: 4 vs. 32 μg × min/mL; P < 0.001) and absolute α-gliadin AUC0-240 min in the duodenum from low (2813 vs. 31 952 μg × min; P < 0.001) and high (2553 vs. 13 095 μg × min; P = 0.013) calorie meals. In the placebo group, the high compared to low calorie meal slowed gastric emptying and lowered the duodenal α-gliadin concentration AUC0-240 min (32 vs. 168 μg × min/mL; P = 0.001). CONCLUSIONS AN-PEP significantly enhanced gluten digestion in the stomach of healthy volunteers. Increasing caloric density prolonged gastric residence time of the meal. Since AN-PEP already degraded most gluten from low calorie meals, no incremental effect was observed by increasing meal caloric density. ClinicalTrials.gov, Number: NCT01335503; www.trialregister.nl, Number: NTR2780.

Lifestyle medicine

Patient Centred Factors : Triggers/Proline
Environmental Inputs : Nutrients
Personal Lifestyle Factors : Nutrition
Functional Laboratory Testing : Tissue biopsy
Bioactive Substances : Proline

Methodological quality

Allocation concealment : Yes

Metadata

Nutrition Evidence keywords : Proline ; Coeliac disease