Perinatal exposure to foodborne inorganic nanoparticles: A role in the susceptibility to food allergy?

Front Allergy

Département Médicaments et Technologies Pour la Santé (MTS), SPI/Laboratoire d'Immuno-Allergie Alimentaire, Université Paris-Saclay, CEA, INRAE, Gif-sur-Yvette, France.

Published: December 2022

AI Article Synopsis

  • Food allergies arise from inappropriate immune responses to certain food components, and environmental factors during pregnancy can influence this risk.
  • Chronic exposure of mothers to inorganic nanoparticles in food—like silicon dioxide, titanium dioxide, or silver—can negatively affect the developing fetus by crossing the placenta and potentially being present in breast milk.
  • Such exposure may disrupt the beneficial gut microbiota and interfere with immune system development in infants, increasing the chances of developing food allergies later on.

Article Abstract

Food allergy (FA) is an inappropriate immune response against dietary antigens. Various environmental factors during perinatal life may alter the establishment of intestinal homeostasis, thereby predisposing individuals to the development of such immune-related diseases. Among these factors, recent studies have emphasized the chronic dietary exposure of the mother to foodborne inorganic nanoparticles (NP) such as nano-sized silicon dioxide (SiO), titanium dioxide (TiO) or silver (Ag). Indeed, there is growing evidence that these inorganic agents, used as food additives in various products, as processing aids during food manufacturing or in food contact materials, can cross the placental barrier and reach the developing fetus. Excretion in milk is also suggested, hence continuing to expose the neonate during a critical window of susceptibility. Due to their immunotoxical and biocidal properties, such exposure may disrupt the host-intestinal microbiota's beneficial exchanges and may interfere with intestinal barrier and gut-associated immune system development in fetuses then the neonates. The resulting dysregulated intestinal homeostasis in the infant may significantly impede the induction of oral tolerance, a crucial process of immune unresponsiveness to food antigens. The current review focuses on the possible impacts of perinatal exposure to foodborne NP during pregnancy and early life on the susceptibility to developing FA.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9760876PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/falgy.2022.1067281DOI Listing

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