Abstract
One of the diagnostic hallmarks of the histological lesions associated with celiac disease is the extensive infiltration of the small intestinal epithelium by CD8+ T cells of unknown Ag specificity. In this study, we report recognition of the gliadin-derived peptide (A-gliadin 123–132) by CD8+ T lymphocytes from celiac patients. A-gliadin 123–132-specific IFN-γ production and cytotoxic activity were detected in PBMCs derived from patients on gluten-free diet, but not from either celiac patients on gluten-containing diet or healthy controls. In contrast, A-gliadin 123–132-specific cells were isolated from small intestine biopsies of patients on either gluten-free or gluten-containing diets. Short-term T cell lines derived from the small intestinal mucosa and specific for the 123–132 epitope recognized human APC pulsed with either whole recombinant α-gliadin or a partial pepsin-trypsin gliadin digest. Finally, we speculate on a possible mechanism leading to processing and presentation of class I-restricted gliadin-derived epitopes in celiac disease patients.
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CITATION STYLE
Gianfrani, C., Troncone, R., Mugione, P., Cosentini, E., De Pascale, M., Faruolo, C., … Sette, A. (2003). Celiac Disease Association with CD8+ T Cell Responses: Identification of a Novel Gliadin-Derived HLA-A2-Restricted Epitope. The Journal of Immunology, 170(5), 2719–2726. https://doi.org/10.4049/jimmunol.170.5.2719
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