Team:UC Davis/Treatments

From 2009.igem.org

Current Treatments

Currently, there is no cure for this genetic condition. Prevention of the symptoms associated with celiac disease is accomplished through adopting a gluten-free diet (14, 12, 11). However, gluten is present in most everyday diets, making it difficult to have a gluten-free diet.

"Oral supplementation with prolyl oligopeptidases has therefore been proposed as a potential therapeutic approach."(8) However, enzymes studied earlier were not able to degrade gluten inside stomach before it reaches small intestine because they were "irreversibly inactivated by pepsin and acidic pH, both present in the stomach."(8)

Over the past years, researchers discovered an enzyme from the bacterium Aspergillus niger. This recently identified prolyl endoprotease was observed to "work optimally at 4-5 pH and [remain] stable at 2 pH".(8) It is possible that this enzyme may provide an alternative treatment for celiac disease. (8) Studies have shown that prolyl endoprotease is able to "degrade gluten in vitro and under conditions similar to the ones present in the gastrointestinal tract." (8) However, due to licensing restrictions we have opted not to work with this protein.

In 2007, a study suggested an alternative approach by combining a glutamine-specific endoprotease (EP-B2 from barley) and a prolyl endopeptidase (SC PEP from Sphingomonas capsulata); with gastric activity and complementary substrate specificity there is a possibility of increasing the safe threshold of ingested gluten (12). An advantage of this “combination product is that both enzymes are active and stable in stomach and can therefore be administered as lyophilized powders or simple capsules or tablets” (12).

Note: This study was first “evaluated via in vitro digestion of whole-wheat bread and then confirmed by in vivo studies in rats (12), unlike other earlier studies which were performed on synthetic gluten oligopeptides, recombinant gliadin proteins, or uncooked gluten” (12).

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