Sylvie van Zandycke (1); (1) DSM Food Specialties,
IBD Symposium
Tuesday, August 16 • 8:15–11:30 a.m.
Tower Building, Second Level, Grand Ballroom
Gluten proteins and peptides present in beer mainly originate from
the grains used: namely barley and wheat. Although partially hydrolyzed
during the brewing process, large gluten fragments remain present in the
final beer. Celiac and gluten-sensitive individuals may therefore
experience an adverse response when drinking beer. AN-PEP is a
proline-specific endopeptidase that can be used during fermentation to
selectively degrade proline-rich gluten peptides and proteins. The
unusually high percentage of proline in known celiac-related gluten
epitopes makes it an ideal substrate for AN-PEP. It was confirmed that
in beers prepared with AN-PEP, gluten levels were well below 20 mg/kg
based on the established competitive R5 ELISA method. A sensitive
LC-MS/MS method developed in-house was used to identify the peptides.
Beers brewed with a conventional process displayed evidence of
epitope-containing peptides, even in beers that contained less than 20
mg/kg. This was not the case for beers brewed using AN-PEP where no
intact epitopes were found. Even though the MS method is qualitative and
not quantitative, it provided a more detailed view of the fate of
gluten during brewing. Specifically, these data indicate that ANPEP is
able to degrade all known immunogenic gluten epitopes in barley malt
beer.
Sylvie studied biochemical engineering and fermentation at the
Institute Meurice (Brussels, Belgium); she completed her degree in 1996.
She then obtained her Ph.D. degree on Saccharomyces cerevisiae
in 2000 from Oxford Brookes University in the UK. After that Sylvie was
employed as project manager for the brewing consultancy firm SMART
Brewing Services until 2004, where she left the UK for Montreal, Canada,
and accepted a post with Lallemand. As project manager for their
genetic identification laboratory she focused on yeast and bacteria used
in alcoholic beverage production. In 2007 Sylvie became technical sales
manager for Lallemand Brewing, looking after dry yeast and nutrition
products on a global basis. At the end of 2011, she joined DSM Food
Specialties as technical service manager for brewing enzymes in North
America and she is currently global key account manager for brewing
enzymes.