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Transglutaminase 2-specific coeliac disease autoantibodies induce morphological changes and signs of inflammation in the small-bowel mucosa of mice

Authors :
Daniele Sblattero
Victoria Ortín Piqueras
Juha A. E. Määttä
Markku Mäki
Sergio Caja
Ilma Rita Korponay-Szabó
Keijo Viiri
Heini Huhtala
Kaija Laurila
Arja Pasternack
Katri Kaukinen
Katri Lindfors
Suvi Kalliokoski
Ana-Marija Sulic
Niklas Kähkönen
Rafael Frias
Kalliokoski, Suvi
Piqueras, Victoria Ortín
Frías, Rafael
Sulic, Ana Marija
Määttä, Juha A. E.
Kähkönen, Nikla
Viiri, Keijo
Huhtala, Heini
Pasternack, Arja
Laurila, Kaija
Sblattero, Daniele
Korponay Szabó, Ilma R.
Mäki, Markku
Caja, Sergio
Kaukinen, Katri
Lindfors, Katri
Lääketieteen ja biotieteiden tiedekunta - Faculty of Medicine and Life Sciences
University of Tampere
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

Coeliac disease is hallmarked by an abnormal immune reaction against ingested wheat-, rye- and barley-derived gluten and the presence of transglutaminase 2 (TG2)-targeted autoantibodies. The small-bowel mucosal damage characteristic of the disorder develops gradually from normal villus morphology to inflammation and finally to villus atrophy with crypt hyperplasia. Patients with early-stage coeliac disease have TG2-autoantibodies present in serum and small-intestinal mucosa and they may already suffer from abdominal symptoms before the development of villus atrophy. Previously, we have shown that intraperitoneal injections of coeliac patient-derived sera or purified immunoglobulin fraction into mice induce a condition mimicking early-stage coeliac disease. In the current study, we sought to establish whether recombinantly produced patient-derived TG2-targeted autoantibodies are by themselves sufficient for the development of such an experimentally induced condition in immune-compromised mice. Interestingly, mice injected with coeliac patient TG2-antibodies had altered small-intestinal mucosal morphology, increased lamina propria cellular infiltration and disease-specific autoantibodies deposited in the small bowel, but did not evince clinical features of the disease. Thus, coeliac patient-derived TG2-specific autoantibodies seem to be sufficient for the induction of subtle small-bowel mucosal alterations in mice, but the development of clinical features probably requires additional factors such as other antibody populations relevant in coeliac disease.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....7a5f1b85e3b70742bbe373a7088f555a