Triticeae glutens

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Wheat gluten flour

Gluten is the seed storage protein in mature wheat seeds (and in the seeds of closely related species). It is the sticky substance in bread wheat which allows dough to rise and retain its shape during baking. The same, or very similar, proteins are also found in related grasses within the tribe Triticeae. Seed glutens of some non-Triticeae plants have similar properties, but none can perform on a par with those of the Triticeae taxa, particularly the Triticum species (bread wheat, durum wheat, etc.). What distinguishes bread wheat from these other grass seeds is the quantity of these proteins and the level of subcomponents, with bread wheat having the highest protein content and a complex mixture of proteins derived from three grass species (Aegilops speltoides, Aegilops tauschii strangulata, and Triticum monococcum).

Triticeae seed proteins fall into four groups:[1]

Of these proteins the last two, prolamin (in wheat – gliadin) and glutelin (in wheat – glutenin) form the classically defined gluten components in wheat.

Triticeae glutens are primarily important to a developing definition 'gluten-free' in dietary treatments for gluten sensitivity which are intended to exclude pathogenic proteins from the diet of susceptible individuals (such as coeliac disease, irritable bowel syndrome, or inflammatory bowel diseases). The poisonous motifs appear to be spread widely in Triticeae, but not other taxa, for most coeliacs. However all four proteins are involved in wheat allergies, and proteins from non-wheats may not be involved in certain gluten allergies, or in idiopathic sensitivities.

Genetics of prolamins and glutelins

Proteins of the Triticeae endosperm that are generally rich in arginine, proline, glutamine, and/or asparagine.

  • Prolamins
    • Triticum (true wheats) – gliadins
    • Hordeum (food barleys) – hordeins (B-hordein is homologous to LMW-glutenin)
    • Secale (food ryes) – secalins
  • glutelins
    • Triticumglutenin
    • Hordeum – barley glutelin[2]
    • Secale – rye glutelin

Because of the usefulness of wheat glutens, genetic studies have largely focused on wheat genetics. Wheat has three genomes (AABBDD) and it can encode for many variations of the same protein, even in the gliadin subcategories many types of gliadin per cultivar, X = genome (A, B, or D genome chromosomes (1 to 7)). The A and B genomes are derived from wild emmers wheat which in turn is a natural digenomic species that contains a Triticum monococcum- and Aegilops speltoides-like genome. The D genome is derived from the extant species Aegilops tauschii strangulatum.[3]

Chromosome 1 Chromosome 6
Short arm Long arm Short arm

(≈30 coding loci over A, B, D indeterminate alleles)

Glutenins HMW Glu-X1:

A >2 alleles, B >8 alleles, D >4 alleles

LMW Glu-X3:

A >5 alleles, B >7 alleles, D >2 alleles

Gliadins α-gliadin Gli-X2
β-gliadin few - variants of γ-gliadin that

migrate with β-gliadins?

most – (Gli-X2) variants of α-gliadin

with alter isoelectric points

γ-gliadin most - (Gli-X3)

homologous proteins exist in barley

ω-gliadin Gli-X1:

A is null @ 84%, B >8 alleles, D >4 alleles

few – (Gli-X2) variants of α-gliadin

that migrate with γ-gliadins?

The genetic studies indicate that in wheat, each protein type can be encoded by several loci and several different alleles for each loci can be found in different genomes, allowing a great number of uniquely encoded isoforms.

Biochemistry of Triticeae prolamins and glutelins

Chemical behavior

  • Gliadins, an example of the prolamins in Triticeae, are separated on the basis of electrophoretic mobility and isoelectric focusing
    • α-/β-gliadins – soluble in low percentage alcohols
    • γ-gliadins – ancestral form of cysteine rich gliadin with only intrachain disulfide
    • ω-gliadins – soluble in higher percentages of alcohol and acidic acetonitrile
  • Cultivar glutelins in Triticeae
    • Glutenin is 35-40% of wheat (Triticum aestivum) protein.
    • Glutenin in wheat forms long covalantly interlinked polymers of two repeating subunits
      • High molecular weight (HMW) – proline-less (Glu-1 locus)
      • Low molecular weight (LMW) – α-gliadin-like polypeptide (Glu-3 locus)
    • Barley (Hordeum) has two glutelins, soluble at high pH, precipitates at low pH
      • α-glutelin (major component, HMW) – cuts at 1 to 3% rel. saturation ammonium sulfate
      • β-glutelin (minor component) – cuts at 18% rel. saturation ammonium sulfate
    • Rye (Secalin) has one glutelin
      • HMW – (equivalent of Barley α-glutelin)
      • LMW – subspecies sylvestre has (Glu-R3) glutenin-like (Ssy1, Ssy2 and Ssy3 loci)[4]

As substrates for enzymes

Tissue transglutaminase

Modification of glutamine

Prolamins and to a lesser degree glutelins are excellent substrates for deamidation particularly by mammalian tissue transglutaminases (tTG). Deamidation is a process in which the R-C0-NH2 portion of glutamines (or asparagine) is hydrolyzed to R-CO-OH forming glutamic acid or aspartic acid. In gliadin, the -QQP-, -QVP-, -QLP-, -QYP- tripeptides in the context of favorable adjacent peptides are readily deamidated.[5] Most proteins have few or no such transglutaminase sites; however alpha gliadin has 13 such sites. Human tissue transglutaminase not only deamidates gliadin, but it also crosslinks itself to gliadin, which has immunological consequences. Gliadin also has a small peptide that appears to alter the distribution of transglutaminase in the gut but is not crosslinked, the mechanism of its 'innate' behavior is not clear. tTG also crosslinks gliadin to other proteins via these sites, generating anti-food responses, anti-self protein responses, and self-crossreactive responses to food proteins that result in secondary autoimmunities. The role of tTG in the extracellular matrix is to crosslink lysine side chains of proteins such as collagen to proteins, however glutens appear to infiltrate into the small intestine, interfering with this process and resulting in a false immune recognition of the matrix and surrounding cells as foreign, leading, ultimately, to the destruction of the intestinal mucosa. Seeds of certain plants may elicit the innate and cellular responses as a defensive response to overconsumption of seeds.

Proteolysis

While prolamins and glutelins are excellent deamidase and transaminase substrates the highly repetitive motifs, particularly polyproline/glutamine tracts, are often poor substrates for gastrointestinal endoproteases, such as those produced in the GI tract. One clear example is a 33-mer of α-2 gliadin. Another digestion resistant region is a 25-mer which contains the innate peptide.[6] The alpha gliadins, which bear these sites, specifically are poisonous to young rats when fed at concentrations higher than 1%[7] and the addition of mannosidase inhibitors increases the sensitivity specifically to alpha gliadins.[8] These properties of certain alpha-gliadins appear to have evolved to prevent long-term or dedicated consumption of certain wheat grasses by certain species. This is one of the ironic properties of wheat, since a major advantage of wheat is the amount of protein in the wheat, however, some of this is wasted to the gut flora (or host immune system) since it cannot be broken down. One suggested remedy to this problem are new enzymes that help specifically break prolamins in the stomach. This may prevent the onset of wheat related disease in susceptible individuals, but no such screening is currently effective and once the clinical state is reached most individuals are so sensitive to wheat gliadins that, effectively, complete digestion in the stomach would be required.

Immunochemistry of Triticeae glutens

The immunochemistry of Triticeae is important in several autoimmune diseases (see section on Human Disease), gluten sensitivity and gluten allergy in general. It can be subdivided into innate responses (direct stimulation of immune system), Class II mediated presentation (HLA DQ), Class I mediated stimulation of killer cells, and Antibody recognition. The DQ restricted class II mediated presentation of gliadin to T-helper lymphocytes appears to be the primary process involved in coeliac disease.

History and food use of triticeae glutens

Triticeae and human disease

References

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