Garber Mitchell E, Saldanha Alok, Parker Joel S, Jones Wendell D, Kaukinen Katri, Laurila Kaija, Lähdeaho Marja-Leena, Khatri Purvesh, Khosla Chaitan, Adelman Daniel C, Mäki Markku
Alvine Pharmaceuticals, Inc, San Carlos, California.
Department of Chemistry, Stanford, California.
Cell Mol Gastroenterol Hepatol. 2017 Jan 28;4(1):1-17. doi: 10.1016/j.jcmgh.2017.01.011. eCollection 2017 Jul.
BACKGROUND & AIMS: Celiac disease (CeD) provides an opportunity to study autoimmunity and the transition in immune cells as dietary gluten induces small intestinal lesions.
Seventy-three celiac disease patients on a long-term, gluten-free diet ingested a known amount of gluten daily for 6 weeks. A peripheral blood sample and intestinal biopsy specimens were taken before and 6 weeks after initiating the gluten challenge. Biopsy results were reported on a continuous numeric scale that measured the villus-height-to-crypt-depth ratio to quantify gluten-induced intestinal injury. Pooled B and T cells were isolated from whole blood, and RNA was analyzed by DNA microarray looking for changes in peripheral B- and T-cell gene expression that correlated with changes in villus height to crypt depth, as patients maintained a relatively healthy intestinal mucosa or deteriorated in the face of a gluten challenge.
Gluten-dependent intestinal damage from baseline to 6 weeks varied widely across all patients, ranging from no change to extensive damage. Genes differentially expressed in B cells correlated strongly with the extent of intestinal damage. A relative increase in B-cell gene expression correlated with a lack of sensitivity to gluten whereas their relative decrease correlated with gluten-induced mucosal injury. A core B-cell gene module, representing a subset of B-cell genes analyzed, accounted for the correlation with intestinal injury.
Genes comprising the core B-cell module showed a net increase in expression from baseline to 6 weeks in patients with little to no intestinal damage, suggesting that these individuals may have mounted a B-cell immune response to maintain mucosal homeostasis and circumvent inflammation. DNA microarray data were deposited at the GEO repository (accession number: GSE87629; available: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/geo/).
乳糜泻(CeD)为研究自身免疫以及饮食中的麸质诱发小肠病变时免疫细胞的转变提供了契机。
73例长期遵循无麸质饮食的乳糜泻患者每日摄入一定量的麸质,持续6周。在麸质激发试验开始前及开始后6周采集外周血样本和肠道活检标本。活检结果以连续数值量表报告,该量表测量绒毛高度与隐窝深度之比以量化麸质诱发的肠道损伤。从全血中分离出B细胞和T细胞并进行合并,通过DNA微阵列分析RNA,寻找外周B细胞和T细胞基因表达的变化,这些变化与绒毛高度与隐窝深度的变化相关,因为患者在麸质激发试验中维持相对健康的肠黏膜或肠黏膜恶化。
所有患者从基线到6周的麸质依赖性肠道损伤差异很大,从无变化到广泛损伤。B细胞中差异表达的基因与肠道损伤程度密切相关。B细胞基因表达的相对增加与对麸质不敏感相关,而其相对减少与麸质诱发的黏膜损伤相关。一个核心B细胞基因模块,代表所分析的B细胞基因的一个子集,解释了与肠道损伤的相关性。
对于肠道损伤很小或没有肠道损伤的患者,从基线到6周,构成核心B细胞模块的基因表达呈净增加,这表明这些个体可能已经启动了B细胞免疫反应以维持黏膜稳态并避免炎症。DNA微阵列数据存于基因表达综合数据库(GEO)(登录号:GSE87629;网址:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/geo/)。