Ivens Katherine O, Baumert Joseph L, Hutkins Robert L, Taylor Steve L
Food Allergy Research and Resource Program, Department of Food Science and Technology, University of Nebraska-Lincoln, PO Box 886207, Lincoln 68588.
Department of Food Science and Technology, University of Nebraska-Lincoln, Lincoln 68588.
J Dairy Sci. 2017 Mar;100(3):1629-1639. doi: 10.3168/jds.2016-11649. Epub 2016 Dec 29.
Cow milk is a common allergenic food, and cow milk-derived cheese retains an appreciable level of allergenicity. The specific and sensitive detection of milk protein residues in foods is needed to protect milk-allergic consumers from exposure to undeclared milk protein residues contained in foods made with milk or milk-derived ingredients or made on shared equipment or in shared facilities with milk or milk-derived ingredients. However, during cheese ripening, milk proteins are degraded by chymosin and milk-derived and bacterial proteases. Commercial allergen-detection methods are not validated for the detection of residues in fermented or hydrolyzed products. The objective of this research was to evaluate commercially available milk ELISA kits for their capability to detect milk protein residues in aged Cheddar cheese. Cheddar cheese was manufactured at a local dairy plant and was aged at 5°C for 24 mo, with samples removed at various time points throughout aging. Milk protein residues and protein profiles were measured using 4 commercial milk ELISA kits and sodium dodecyl sulfate-PAGE. The ELISA data revealed a 90% loss of milk protein residue signal between the youngest and oldest Cheddar cheese samples (0.5 and 24 mo, respectively). Sodium dodecyl sulfate-PAGE analysis showed protein degradation throughout aging, with the highest level of proteolysis observed at 24 mo. Results suggest that current commercial milk ELISA methods can detect milk protein residues in young Cheddar cheese, but the detection signal dramatically decreases during aging. The 4 evaluated ELISA kits were not capable of detecting trace levels of milk protein residues in aged cheese. Reliable detection of allergen residues in fermented food products is critical for upholding allergen-control programs, maintaining product safety, and protecting allergic consumers. Furthermore, this research suggests a novel use of ELISA kits to monitor protein degradation as an indication of cheese ripening.
牛奶是一种常见的致敏性食物,源自牛奶的奶酪仍具有相当程度的致敏性。为保护牛奶过敏的消费者不接触到含有牛奶或牛奶衍生成分的食品中未标明的牛奶蛋白残留,或者在与牛奶或牛奶衍生成分共用设备或设施中生产的食品中的此类残留,需要对食品中的牛奶蛋白残留进行特异性和灵敏的检测。然而,在奶酪成熟过程中,牛奶蛋白会被凝乳酶以及源自牛奶和细菌的蛋白酶降解。商业过敏原检测方法尚未针对发酵或水解产品中的残留检测进行验证。本研究的目的是评估市售牛奶酶联免疫吸附测定(ELISA)试剂盒检测陈年切达干酪中牛奶蛋白残留的能力。切达干酪在当地一家乳制品厂生产,并在5°C下陈化24个月,在整个陈化过程中的不同时间点取样。使用4种市售牛奶ELISA试剂盒和十二烷基硫酸钠-聚丙烯酰胺凝胶电泳(SDS-PAGE)测定牛奶蛋白残留和蛋白质谱。ELISA数据显示,最年轻和最老的切达干酪样品(分别为0.5个月和24个月)之间牛奶蛋白残留信号损失了90%。SDS-PAGE分析表明,在整个陈化过程中蛋白质都在降解,在24个月时观察到最高程度的蛋白水解。结果表明,目前的市售牛奶ELISA方法可以检测年轻切达干酪中的牛奶蛋白残留,但在陈化过程中检测信号会显著降低。所评估的4种ELISA试剂盒无法检测陈年奶酪中痕量的牛奶蛋白残留。可靠检测发酵食品中的过敏原残留对于维护过敏原控制计划、保持产品安全以及保护过敏消费者至关重要。此外,本研究还提出了ELISA试剂盒的一种新用途,即监测蛋白质降解以作为奶酪成熟的指标。