Tetramer visualization of gut-homing gluten-specific T cells in the peripheral blood of celiac disease patients

M Ráki, LE Fallang, M Brottveit… - Proceedings of the …, 2007 - National Acad Sciences
M Ráki, LE Fallang, M Brottveit, E Bergseng, H Quarsten, KEA Lundin, LM Sollid
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2007National Acad Sciences
Tetramers of MHC–peptide complexes are used for detection and characterization of
antigen-specific T cell responses, but they require knowledge about both antigenic peptide
and the MHC restriction element. The successful application of these reagents in human
diseases involving CD4+ T cells is limited. Celiac disease, an intestinal inflammation driven
by mucosal CD4+ T cells recognizing wheat gluten peptides in the context of disease-
associated HLA-DQ molecules, is an ideal model to test the potential clinical use of these …
Tetramers of MHC–peptide complexes are used for detection and characterization of antigen-specific T cell responses, but they require knowledge about both antigenic peptide and the MHC restriction element. The successful application of these reagents in human diseases involving CD4+ T cells is limited. Celiac disease, an intestinal inflammation driven by mucosal CD4+ T cells recognizing wheat gluten peptides in the context of disease-associated HLA-DQ molecules, is an ideal model to test the potential clinical use of these reagents. We investigated whether gluten-specific T cells can be detected in the peripheral blood of celiac disease patients using DQ2 tetramers. Nine DQ2+ patients and six control individuals on a gluten-free diet were recruited to the study. Participants consumed 160 g of gluten-containing bread daily for 3 days. After bread-challenge, gluten-specific T cells were detectable in the peripheral blood of celiac patients but not controls both directly by tetramer staining and indirectly by enzyme-linked immunospot. These T cells expressed the β7 integrin indicative of gut-homing properties. Most of the cells had a memory phenotype, but many other phenotypic markers showed a heterogeneous pattern. Tetramer staining of gluten-specific T cells has the potential to be used for diagnosis of celiac disease.
National Acad Sciences