Abstract

Celiac disease (CD) is a chronic intestinal inflammation caused by gluten ingestion in genetically predisposed individuals. Overt-CD and potential-CD are the two main forms of gluten intolerance in pediatric patients with different grades of intestinal mucosa lesion and clinical management. For overt-CD patients the gluten-free diet is mandatory, while for potential-CD the dietary therapy is recommended only for those subjects becoming clinically symptomatic overtime. To date, specific early biomarkers of evolution to villous atrophy in potential-CD are lacking. We recently observed an expansion of TCRγδ+ T cells and a concomitant disappearance of IL4-producing T cells in the intestinal mucosa of overt-CD patients compared to potential-CD children, suggesting the involvement of these two cells subsets in the transition from potential-CD to overt-CD. In this study, we demonstrated that the intestinal densities of IL4+ T cells inversely correlated with TCRγδ+ T cell expansion (p < 0.005) and with the serum levels of anti-tissue transglutaminase antibodies (p < 0.01). The changes of these two cell subsets strongly correlated with mucosal lesions, according to the histological Marsh classification, as the transition from M0 to M3 lesions was associated with a significant reduction of IL4+ T cells (M0 vs. M1 p < 0.04, M0 vs. M3 p < 0.007) and an increase of TCRγδ+ T cells (M0 vs. M1 p < 0.05, M0 vs. M3 p < 0.0006). These findings strongly suggest that the detection of TCRγδ+ and IL4+ T cells could serve as cellular biomarkers of mucosal lesion and targets of novel immunomodulatory therapies for CD.

Highlights

  • IntroductionPublisher’s Note: MDPI stays neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations

  • A significant inverse correlation was observed between the percentages of TCRγδ+ and IL4+ T cells, in 41 children enrolled in the study

  • Based on the clinical and serological heterogeneity, we found worthy to investigate the possible correlations between the percentages of TCRγδ+ and IL4+ T cells and the serum anti-tTG2 titres, in Celiac disease (CD) patients enrolled in the study

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Summary

Introduction

Publisher’s Note: MDPI stays neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations. Celiac disease (CD) is a chronic intestinal inflammation caused by dysregulated immune response to dietary gluten in genetically predisposed individuals. Several large population studies reported an association of CD with non-HLA risk alleles with different functions in the immune response, as genes implicated in the maturation and /or activation of T lymphocytes (CD28, CTLA4, ICOS, interleukin (IL)-2 and IL-21), [2,3]. CD clinically can arise with gastrointestinal or extra-intestinal symptoms or being totally asymptomatic. In this latter case, the disease can be diagnosed in subjects screened for familiarity or by general population screening [4].

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