| Literature DB >> 27503559 |
Suvi Kalliokoski1, Victoria Ortín Piqueras2,3, Rafael Frías3,4, Ana-Marija Sulic5, Juha A E Määttä6, Niklas Kähkönen6, Keijo Viiri5, Heini Huhtala7, Arja Pasternack8, Kaija Laurila5, Daniele Sblattero9, Ilma R Korponay-Szabó5,10, Markku Mäki5, Sergio Caja5, Katri Kaukinen11, Katri Lindfors5.
Abstract
Coeliac disease is hallmarked by an abnormal immune reaction against ingested wheat-, rye- and barley-derived gluten and the presence of transglutaminase 2 (TG2)-targeted autoantibodies. The small-bowel mucosal damage characteristic of the disorder develops gradually from normal villus morphology to inflammation and finally to villus atrophy with crypt hyperplasia. Patients with early-stage coeliac disease have TG2-autoantibodies present in serum and small-intestinal mucosa and they may already suffer from abdominal symptoms before the development of villus atrophy. Previously, we have shown that intraperitoneal injections of coeliac patient-derived sera or purified immunoglobulin fraction into mice induce a condition mimicking early-stage coeliac disease. In the current study, we sought to establish whether recombinantly produced patient-derived TG2-targeted autoantibodies are by themselves sufficient for the development of such an experimentally induced condition in immune-compromised mice. Interestingly, mice injected with coeliac patient TG2-antibodies had altered small-intestinal mucosal morphology, increased lamina propria cellular infiltration and disease-specific autoantibodies deposited in the small bowel, but did not evince clinical features of the disease. Thus, coeliac patient-derived TG2-specific autoantibodies seem to be sufficient for the induction of subtle small-bowel mucosal alterations in mice, but the development of clinical features probably requires additional factors such as other antibody populations relevant in coeliac disease.Entities:
Keywords: Cellular infiltration; Cytokine; Intestinal autoantibody deposits; Intestinal permeability; Small-intestinal morphology
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27503559 DOI: 10.1007/s00726-016-2306-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Amino Acids ISSN: 0939-4451 Impact factor: 3.520