Development, Validation, and Interlaboratory Evaluation
of a Quantitative Multiplexing Method To Assess Levels of Ten Endogenous
Allergens in Soybean Seed and Its Application to Field Trials Spanning
Three Growing Seasons
posted on 2017-06-21, 00:00authored byRyan C. Hill, Trent J. Oman, Xiujuan Wang, Guomin Shan, Barry Schafer, Rod A. Herman, Rowel Tobias, Jeff Shippar, Bhaskar Malayappan, Li Sheng, Austin Xu, Jason Bradshaw
As
part of the regulatory approval process in Europe, comparison
of endogenous soybean allergen levels between genetically engineered
(GE) and non-GE plants has been requested. A quantitative multiplex
analytical method using tandem mass spectrometry was developed and
validated to measure 10 potential soybean allergens from soybean seed.
The analytical method was implemented at six laboratories to demonstrate
the robustness of the method and further applied to three soybean
field studies across multiple growing seasons (including 21 non-GE
soybean varieties) to assess the natural variation of allergen levels.
The results show environmental factors contribute more than genetic
factors to the large variation in allergen abundance (2- to 50-fold
between environmental replicates) as well as a large contribution
of Gly m 5 and Gly m 6 to the total allergen profile, calling into
question the scientific rational for measurement of endogenous allergen
levels between GE and non-GE varieties in the safety assessment.