Celiac disease

Mol Biotechnol. 2002 Nov;22(3):293-9. doi: 10.1385/MB:22:3:293.

Abstract

Clinically, celiac disease has always been regarded as a wasting, malabsorptive disorder due to disease of the small intestinal mucosa. It has been difficult for clinicians to recognize that this condition is primarily due to sensitization of mesenteric T lymphocytes to wheat protein (gluten) in genetically predisposed (DQ2+) individuals. On contact with dietary-derived gluten in the upper intestine, these sensitized T lymphocytes are activated leading to inflammation of and morphologically altered mucosal architecture: the latter reverts to normal with a gluten-free diet. The circulation of sensitized T lymphocytes to other parts of the intestinal mucosa explains why identical immunopathological inflammation can be induced in ileal and rectal mucosa. It appears, then, that in predisposed DQ2+ subjects, mesenteric T lymphocytes recognize gluten as foreign (non-self) antigen, thereby inducing mucosal pathology secondary to the initiating lymphocyte-protein interaction, analogously to the mucosal lesions that typify graft-vs-host reactions, or nematode or Giaraia infestations. Today, as this article describes, we recognize that celiac disease often exists in a subclinical, or "compensated-latent," form, or with symptoms that do not immediately suggest an origin in the gastrointestinal tract.

Publication types

  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Celiac Disease / etiology
  • Celiac Disease / genetics
  • Celiac Disease / immunology*
  • Dietary Proteins / adverse effects
  • Dietary Proteins / immunology
  • Genetic Predisposition to Disease
  • Glutens / adverse effects
  • Glutens / immunology*
  • HLA-DQ Antigens / immunology
  • Humans
  • Immunity, Mucosal
  • Intestinal Mucosa / immunology*
  • Intestines / pathology
  • Lymphocyte Activation / immunology*
  • Plant Proteins / immunology*
  • Prolamins
  • T-Lymphocytes / immunology*

Substances

  • Dietary Proteins
  • HLA-DQ Antigens
  • HLA-DQ2 antigen
  • Plant Proteins
  • Prolamins
  • Glutens