| Literature DB >> 30981209 |
Speranza Esposito1, Valeria Rachela Villella1, Eleonora Ferrari1,2, Romina Monzani1,2, Antonella Tosco3, Federica Rossin4, Manuela D'Eletto4, Alice Castaldo3, Alessandro Luciani5, Marco Silano6, Gianni Bona2, Gian Luigi Marseglia7, Luigina Romani8, Mauro Piacentini4,9, Valeria Raia3,10, Guido Kroemer11,12,13,14,15,16,17,10, Luigi Maiuri1,2,10.
Abstract
In celiac disease (CD), an intolerance to dietary gluten/gliadin, antigenic gliadin peptides trigger an HLA-DQ2/DQ8-restricted adaptive Th1 immune response. Epithelial stress, induced by other non-antigenic gliadin peptides, is required for gliadin to become fully immunogenic. We found that cystic-fibrosis-transmembrane-conductance-regulator (CFTR) acts as membrane receptor for gliadin-derived peptide P31-43, as it binds to CFTR and impairs its channel function. P31-43-induced CFTR malfunction generates epithelial stress and intestinal inflammation. Maintaining CFTR in an active open conformation by the CFTR potentiators VX-770 (Ivacaftor) or Vrx-532, prevents P31-43 binding to CFTR and controls gliadin-induced manifestations. Here, we evaluated the possibility that the over-the-counter nutraceutical genistein, known to potentiate CFTR function, would allow to control gliadin-induced alterations. We demonstrated that pre-treatment with genistein prevented P31-43-induced CFTR malfunction and an epithelial stress response in Caco-2 cells. These effects were abrogated when the CFTR gene was knocked out by CRISP/Cas9 technology, indicating that genistein protects intestinal epithelial cells by potentiating CFTR function. Notably, genistein protected gliadin-sensitive mice from intestinal CFTR malfunction and gliadin-induced inflammation as it prevented gliadin-induced IFN-γ production by celiac peripheral-blood-mononuclear-cells (PBMC) cultured ex-vivo in the presence of P31-43-challenged Caco-2 cells. Our results indicate that natural compounds capable to increase CFTR channel gating might be used for the treatment of CD.Entities:
Keywords: CFTR; celiac disease; genistein; gluten peptides; inflammation
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Year: 2019 PMID: 30981209 PMCID: PMC6503870 DOI: 10.18632/aging.101888
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Aging (Albany NY) ISSN: 1945-4589 Impact factor: 5.682