| Literature DB >> 26633487 |
Stefania Picascia1, Roberta Mandile2, Renata Auricchio3,4, Riccardo Troncone5,6, Carmen Gianfrani7,8.
Abstract
Celiac disease (CD) is a common lifelong food intolerance triggered by dietary gluten affecting 1% of the general population. Gliadin-specific T-cell lines and T-cell clones obtained from intestinal biopsies have provided great support in the investigation of immuno-pathogenesis of CD. In the early 2000 a new in vivo, less invasive, approach was established aimed to evaluate the adaptive gliadin-specific T-cell response in peripheral blood of celiac patients on a gluten free diet. In fact, it has been demonstrated that three days of ingestion of wheat-containing food induces the mobilization of memory T lymphocytes reactive against gliadin from gut-associated lymphoid tissue into peripheral blood of CD patients. Such antigen-specific T-cells releasing interferon-γ can be transiently detected by using the enzyme-linked immunospot (ELISPOT) assays or by flow cytometry tetramer technology. This paper discusses the suitability of this in vivo tool to investigate the repertoire of gluten pathogenic peptides, to support CD diagnosis, and to assess the efficacy of novel therapeutic strategies. A systematic review of all potential applications of short oral gluten challenge is provided.Entities:
Keywords: ELISPOT; celiac disease; gluten challenge; interferon-γ
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26633487 PMCID: PMC4690067 DOI: 10.3390/nu7125515
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nutrients ISSN: 2072-6643 Impact factor: 5.717
Possible translational applications of brief gluten challenge.
| Application | Clinical/Research Purpose | References |
|---|---|---|
| Diagnosis | Confirmation of diagnosis in uncertain celiac disease cases | [ |
| Therapies | Validation of new therapeutic drugs | [ |
| Therapies | Validation of biochemical or enzymatic strategies to detoxify gluten. | [ |
| Therapies | Searching of wheat cultivars with reduced immunotoxic gluten sequences | [ |
| Pathogenesis | Identification of immunogenic gluten epitopes | [ |
| Pathogenesis | Phenotypic analysis of cell population involved in celiac disease | [ |
Figure 1Percentage of subject responders to the short gluten challenge. A cohort of 36 Italian DQ2-positive young celiac patients [8,60] consumed 3–4 wheat bread slices (corresponding to 9–12 g of gluten/die) for three days. Immunoreactivity was evaluated in peripheral blood at day 0 and day 6 by INF-γ-ELISPOT assay, in response to either whole gliadin or immunodominant α-gliadin peptides.