4.8 Article

Comprehensive, Quantitative Mapping of T Cell Epitopes in Gluten in Celiac Disease

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SCIENCE TRANSLATIONAL MEDICINE
卷 2, 期 41, 页码 -

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AMER ASSOC ADVANCEMENT SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1126/scitranslmed.3001012

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资金

  1. National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC)
  2. Australian and New Zealand Coeliac Research Fund
  3. German National Genome Research Network by the Federal Ministry of Education and Research [PBF-S19T10]
  4. Wellcome Trust [GR068094MA]
  5. Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation [10-2006-261]
  6. Australian Research Council
  7. Walter and Eliza Hall Institute
  8. Melbourne Health
  9. Lions Cancer Council
  10. NHMRC [406656]
  11. Coeliac UK Project
  12. Graham Bird Memorial Fund (Oxford)
  13. Oxford University College
  14. BTG International plc, Nexpep Pty Ltd.
  15. NHMRC Independent Research Institutes [361646]
  16. Victorian State Government Operational Infrastructure Support

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Celiac disease is a genetic condition that results in a debilitating immune reaction in the gut to antigens in grain. The antigenic peptides recognized by the T cells that cause this disease are incompletely defined. Our understanding of the epitopes of pathogenic CD4(+) T cells is based primarily on responses shown by intestinal T cells in vitro to hydrolysates or polypeptides of gluten, the causative antigen. A protease-resistant 33-amino acid peptide from wheat alpha-gliadin is the immunodominant antigen, but little is known about the spectrum of T cell epitopes in rye and barley or the hierarchy of immunodominance and consistency of recognition of T cell epitopes in vivo. We induced polyclonal gluten-specific T cells in the peripheral blood of celiac patients by feeding them cereal and performed a comprehensive, unbiased analysis of responses to all celiac toxic prolamins, a class of plant storage protein. The peptides that stimulated T cells were the same among patients who ate the same cereal, but were different after wheat, barley, and rye ingestion. Unexpectedly, a sequence from omega-gliadin (wheat) and C-hordein (barley) but not alpha-gliadin was immunodominant regardless of the grain consumed. Furthermore, T cells specific for just three peptides accounted for most gluten-specific T cells, and their recognition of gluten peptides was highly redundant. Our findings show that pathogenic T cells in celiac disease show limited diversity and therefore suggest that peptide-based therapeutics for this disease and potentially other strongly human leukocyte antigen-restricted immune diseases should be possible.

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