Repertoire Of Gluten Peptides Active In Celiac Disease Patients: Perspectives For Translational Therapeutic Applications
Academic Article
Publication Date:
2012
abstract:
Celiac disease is a common and lifelong food intolerance, affecting approximately 1% of the population.
Because of a mechanism not completely understood, the ingestion of wheat gluten, and of homologue proteins of barley
and rye, induces in genetically predisposed individuals pronounced inflammatory reactions mainly at the site of small
intestine. Gluten, the triggering factor, is a complex protein mixture highly resistant to the gastrointestinal enzymatic
proteolysis, and this results in the presence of large, and potentially immunogenic, peptides at the intestinal mucosa
surface. During the last decade, several studies have defined gluten peptides able to stimulate adaptive T cells, of either
CD4 or CD8 phenotype, and to activate innate (non T) immune cells. This review examines the complete repertoire of
gluten peptides recognized by celiac T cells and discusses the several translational implications that the identification of
these epitopes opens.
Iris type:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
List of contributors:
Gianfrani, Carmela
Published in: