Literature DB >> 9315123

Gliadin specific, HLA DQ2-restricted T cells are commonly found in small intestinal biopsies from coeliac disease patients, but not from controls.

O Molberg1, K Kett, H Scott, E Thorsby, L M Sollid, K E Lundin.   

Abstract

The authors have analysed gliadin specific, CD4+ T cells isolated from small intestinal biopsies of 23 adult coeliac disease patients (20 on a gluten-free diet and three untreated) and nine control patients. The biopsies were stimulated ex vivo with a peptic/tryptic digest of gliadin for 24 h, and activated T cells were positively selected with paramagnetic beads coated with an antibody against the interleukin-2 receptor. The T cells were expanded and tested for gliadin reactivity and HLA restriction. Gliadin specific, polyclonal T cell lines were recovered from biopsies of all 23 patients. Inhibition studies of T cell lines from 21 patients with anti-HLA monoclonal antibodies indicated predominant presentation of the gliadin antigen by HLA-DQ2 in T cell lines from 11 patients (lines from seven patients with complete MoAb inhibition, the remaining with incomplete inhibition) and incomplete inhibition by HLA-DR3 in lines from three patients. Nine gliadin specific T cell clones from six patients were established; all of these were HLA-DQ2 restricted. Gliadin specific T cells were not found in biopsies from the non-coeliac controls. Our findings demonstrate that gliadin reactive T cells are commonly found in the intestinal mucosa of CD patients and they support the notion that the majority of T cell recognize gliadin peptide(s) when presented by the disease associated DQ2 molecules.

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Year:  1997        PMID: 9315123     DOI: 10.1046/j.1365-3083.1997.d01-93.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Scand J Immunol        ISSN: 0300-9475            Impact factor:   3.487


  27 in total

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