Identification of peptides with tolerogenic potential in a hydrolysed whey-based infant formula

Publication date

2018-07-05

Authors

Gouw, Joost WISNI 0000000396050784
Jo, Juandy
Meulenbroek, LauraISNI 0000000419461472
Heijjer, T SamISNI 0000000506610560
Kremer, Erica
Sandalova, Elena
Knulst, André C
Jeurink, Prescilla VISNI 0000000395597980
Garssen, JohanORCID 0000-0002-8678-9182ISNI 0000000034097251
Rijnierse, AnnekeISNI 0000000397195678

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Document Type

Article
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Abstract

BACKGROUND: Failure to induce oral tolerance may result in food allergy. Hydrolysed cow's milk-based infant formulas are recommended in subjects with a high risk of developing allergic disease. Presentation of T cell epitopes is a prerequisite to generate regulatory T cells that could contribute to oral tolerance. OBJECTIVE: To investigate whether a specific hydrolysed whey-based infant formula contains peptides that function as T cell epitopes to support the development of oral tolerance to whey. METHODS: First, a novel liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry (LC-MS) method was developed to characterize β-lactoglobulin-derived peptides present in a specific infant formula with a focus on region AA#13-48 of β-lactoglobulin, which has previously been described to contain T cell epitopes with tolerogenic potential. Second, the formula was subjected to the ProImmune ProPresent® antigen presentation assay and MHC class II binding algorithm to identify relevant HLA-DRB1-restricted peptides. Third, identified peptides were tested on human cow's milk protein-specific T cell lines to determine T cell recognition. RESULTS: Thirteen peptides of minimal 9AAs long that overlap with AA#13-48 of β-lactoglobulin were identified. Six of them were found across all batches analysed. It was further confirmed that these peptides were processed and presented by human dendritic cells. The identified HLA-DRB1-restricted peptides were correlated to AA#11-30 and AA#23-39 of β-lactoglobulin. Importantly, the proliferation assay showed that the synthetic peptides were recognized by cow's milk protein-specific T cell lines and induced T cell proliferation. CONCLUSION AND CLINICAL RELEVANCE: This study demonstrates that the tested hydrolysed infant formula contains functional HLA-DRB1-restricted T cell epitopes, which can potentially support the development of oral tolerance to whey.

Keywords

food allergy, infant formula, oral tolerance, peptidomics, T cell epitope, SDG 3 - Good Health and Well-being

Citation

Gouw, J W, Jo, J, Meulenbroek, L A P M, Heijjer, T S, Kremer, E, Sandalova, E, Knulst, A C, Jeurink, P V, Garssen, J, Rijnierse, A & Knippels, L M J 2018, 'Identification of peptides with tolerogenic potential in a hydrolysed whey-based infant formula', Clinical and Experimental Allergy, vol. 48, no. 10, pp. 1345-1353. https://doi.org/10.1111/cea.13223