Digestibility of gluten proteins is reduced by baking and enhanced by starch digestion
Scope: Resistance of proteins to gastrointestinal digestion may play a role in determining immune-mediated adverse reactions to foods. However, digestion studies have largely been restricted to purified proteins and the impact of food processing and food matrices on protein digestibility is poorly understood. Methods and results: Digestibility of a total gliadin fraction (TGF), flour (cv Hereward), and bread was assessed using in vitro batch digestion with simulated oral, gastric, and duodenal phases. Protein digestion was monitored by SDS-PAGE and immunoblotting using monoclonal antibodies specific for celiac-toxic sequences (QQSF, QPFP) and starch digestion by measuring undigested starch. Whereas the TGF was rapidly digested during the gastric phase the gluten proteins in bread were virtually undigested and digested rapidly during the duodenal phase only if amylase was included. Duodenal starch digestion was also slower in the absence of duodenal proteases. Conclusion: The baking process reduces the digestibility of wheat gluten proteins, including those containing sequences active in celiac disease. Starch digestion affects the extent of protein digestion, probably because of gluten-starch complex formation during baking. Digestion studies using purified protein fractions alone are therefore not predictive of digestion in complex food matrices.
| Item Type | Article |
|---|---|
| Open Access | Gold |
| Additional information | [Smith, Frances; Pan, Xiaoyan; Padfield, Philip; Mills, E. N. Clare] Univ Manchester, Manchester Inst Biotechnol, Inst Inflammat & Repair, Ctr Resp Med & Allergy, Manchester, Lancs, England; [Bellido, Vincent] Inst Polytech laSalle Beauvais, Beauvais, France; [Toole, Geraldine A.] Inst Food Res, Norwich NR4 7UA, Norfolk, England; [Gates, Fred K.] Campden BRI, Chipping Campden, Glos, England; [Wickham, Martin S. J.] Reacta Biotech Ltd, Manchester, Lancs, England; [Shewry, Peter R.] Rothamsted Res, Harpenden, Herts, England; [Bakalis, Serafim] Univ Birmingham, Sch Chem Engn, Birmingham B15 2TT, W Midlands, England |
| Keywords | Food Science & Technology |
| Project | Designing Seeds for Nutrition and Health (DS), Design Cereal Seeds [Shewry/Mitchell] |
| Date Deposited | 05 Dec 2025 09:51 |
| Last Modified | 21 Jan 2026 17:20 |

