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Circulating Extracellular Vesicles Are Increased in Newly Diagnosed Celiac Disease Patients

Authors :
Konstantinos Efthymakis
Giuseppina Bologna
Pasquale Simeone
Laura Pierdomenico
Giulia Catitti
Simone Vespa
Angelo Milano
Domenico De Bellis
Francesco Laterza
Assunta Pandolfi
Caterina Pipino
Michele Sallese
Marco Marchisio
Sebastiano Miscia
Matteo Neri
Paola Lanuti
Source :
Nutrients; Volume 15; Issue 1; Pages: 71
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Extracellular vesicles (EVs) are a class of circulating entities that are involved in intercellular crosstalk mechanisms, participating in homeostasis maintenance, and diseases. Celiac disease is a gluten-triggered immune-mediated disorder, characterized by the inflammatory insult of the enteric mucosa following local lymphocytic infiltration, resulting in villous atrophy. The goal of this research was the assessment and characterization of circulating EVs in celiac disease patients, as well as in patients already on an adequate gluten-free regimen (GFD). For this purpose, a novel and validated technique based on polychromatic flow cytometry that allowed the identification and enumeration of different EV sub-phenotypes was applied. The analysis evidenced that the total, annexin V+, leukocyte (CD45+), and platelet (CD41a+) EV counts were significantly higher in both newly diagnosed celiac disease patients and patients under GFD compared with the healthy controls. Endothelial-derived (CD31+) and epithelial-derived (EpCAM+) EV counts were significantly lower in subjects under gluten exclusion than in celiac disease patients, although EpCAM+ EVs maintained higher counts than healthy subjects. The numbers of EpCAM+ EVs were a statistically significant predictor of intraepithelial leukocytes (IEL). These data demonstrate that EVs could represent novel and potentially powerful disease-specific biomarkers in the context of celiac disease.

Details

ISSN :
20726643
Volume :
15
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nutrients
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....2514d2e4b723639f61381655a44ac01c