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What is a food allergen?

What is a food allergen?
What is a food allergen?
With the increasing prevalence of allergies, accurate identification of allergens is a major priority for allergists, scientists, the food industry, and food regulators. Knowledge of allergens is essential for risk assessment of novel genetically modified (GM) foods, and to develop recombinant proteins for the treatment and diagnosis of allergies. This Opinion Paper considers the lack of standardization for the clinical and scientific assessment of proteins before they are labelled as allergens. Food allergens are being reported and recorded in allergen databases, with minimal or in some cases apparently no published justification. IgE binding, rather than clinically relevant reactivity, is inappropriately used to confirm allergenicity. Using kiwifruit as an example, the lack of rigor in identifying allergenic proteins is considered.
0954-7894
1095-1099
Lucas, J.S.A.
5cb3546c-87b2-4e59-af48-402076e25313
Atkinson, R.G.
1f52ca08-f5ae-4dbb-96ac-336bc54f8cce
Lucas, J.S.A.
5cb3546c-87b2-4e59-af48-402076e25313
Atkinson, R.G.
1f52ca08-f5ae-4dbb-96ac-336bc54f8cce

Lucas, J.S.A. and Atkinson, R.G. (2008) What is a food allergen? Clinical & Experimental Allergy, 38 (7), 1095-1099. (doi:10.1111/j.1365-2222.2008.02988.x). (PMID:18498418)

Record type: Article

Abstract

With the increasing prevalence of allergies, accurate identification of allergens is a major priority for allergists, scientists, the food industry, and food regulators. Knowledge of allergens is essential for risk assessment of novel genetically modified (GM) foods, and to develop recombinant proteins for the treatment and diagnosis of allergies. This Opinion Paper considers the lack of standardization for the clinical and scientific assessment of proteins before they are labelled as allergens. Food allergens are being reported and recorded in allergen databases, with minimal or in some cases apparently no published justification. IgE binding, rather than clinically relevant reactivity, is inappropriately used to confirm allergenicity. Using kiwifruit as an example, the lack of rigor in identifying allergenic proteins is considered.

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Published date: July 2008

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 59370
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/59370
ISSN: 0954-7894
PURE UUID: d17f4895-509e-4dcf-a3b0-7536bd9cdea6
ORCID for J.S.A. Lucas: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-8701-9975

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Date deposited: 03 Sep 2008
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 03:25

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Contributors

Author: J.S.A. Lucas ORCID iD
Author: R.G. Atkinson

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