4.8 Article

In vivo antigen challenge in celiac disease identifies a single transglutaminase-modified peptide as the dominant A-gliadin T-cell epitope

Journal

NATURE MEDICINE
Volume 6, Issue 3, Pages 337-342

Publisher

NATURE AMERICA INC
DOI: 10.1038/73200

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Celiac disease (CD) is an increasingly diagnosed enteropathy (prevalence, 1:200-1:300)(1) that is induced by dietary exposure to wheat gliadins(2) (as well as related proteins in rye and barley) and is strongly associated with HLA-DQ2 (alpha 1*0501, beta 1*0201), which is present in over 90% of CD patients(3). Because a variety of gliadin peptides have been identified as epitopes for gliadin-specific T-cell clones(4-6) and as bioactive sequences in feeding studies and in ex vivo CD intestinal biopsy challenge(7-9), it has been unclear whether a 'dominant' T-cell epitope is associated with CD. Here, we used fresh peripheral blood lymphocytes from individual subjects undergoing shortterm antigen challenge and tissue transglutaminase-treated, overlapping synthetic peptides spanning A-gliadin to demonstrate a transient, disease-specific, DQ2-restricted, CD4 T-cell response to a single dominant epitope. Optimal gamma interferon release in an ELISPOT assay was elicited by a 17-amino-acid peptide corresponding to the partially deamidated peptide of A-gliadin amino acids 57-73 (Q65E). Consistent with earlier reports indicating that host tissue transglutaminase modification of gliadin enhances gliadin-specific CD T-cell responses(10), tissue transglutaminase specifically deamidated Q65 in the peptide of A-gliadin amino acids 56-75. Discovery of this dominant epitope may allow development of antigen-specific immunotherapy for CD.

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