Celiac disease mechanism and therapies (WP5562)
Homo sapiens
In celiac disease, gluten peptides breach the intestinal epithelial barrier and are deamidated by tissue transglutaminase 2 (TG2). These modified peptides are presented on HLA-DQ2 or HLA-DQ8 molecules by antigen-presenting cells (APCs), leading to the activation of gluten-specific CD4⁺ T cells. Once activated, these T cells produce inflammatory cytokines such as IFN-γ, IL-2, IL-21, and TNF-α, which contribute to small-intestinal mucosal damage, in part by acting alongside IL-15 secreted by inflamed epithelial cells. Intraepithelial cytotoxic CD8⁺ T cells are also activated, releasing granzyme B (GZMB) and IFN-γ, amplifying the cycle of inflammation. In the periphery, gluten-specific memory CD4⁺ T cells remain vigilant and rapidly respond to gluten exposure—within 6 hours—by releasing inflammatory mediators like IL-2. Emerging evidence suggests that bacterial or viral infections may disrupt oral tolerance to gluten. Current therapeutic approaches under investigation target multiple stages of CeD pathogenesis: * Glutenases and anti-gliadin antibody AGY degrade or neutralize gluten; * Integrin antagonists and tight junction modulators aim to restore epithelial barrier integrity; * TG2 inhibitors block gluten peptide deamidation; * Anti-IL-15 monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) suppress IL-15–driven inflammation; * CD4⁺ T cell–targeted therapies seek to inhibit the expansion of pathogenic gluten-specific T cells; * Tolerance-inducing strategies aim to delete or anergize gluten-specific CD4⁺ T cells or promote their differentiation into regulatory T cells (Tregs).
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Authors
Eric WeitzActivity
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Organisms
Homo sapiensCommunities
Annotations
Cell Type Ontology
professional antigen presenting cell intestinal epithelial cell CD4-positive, alpha-beta T cell CD8-positive, alpha-beta T cellDisease Ontology
celiac diseasePathway Ontology
drug pathwayLabel | Type | Compact URI | Comment |
---|---|---|---|
Gluten | Metabolite | chebi:192208 | |
Glutenpeptide | Metabolite | chebi:192208 | |
Deaminatedglutenpeptide | Metabolite | chebi:192208 | |
Larazotide | Metabolite | drugbank:DB05645 | |
Latiglutenase | Metabolite | drugbank:DB06326 | |
Teriflunomide | Metabolite | chebi:DB08880 | |
TGM2 | GeneProduct | ensembl:TGM2 | 'TG2' in source |
IL2 | GeneProduct | ensembl:ENSG00000109471 | |
IL21 | GeneProduct | ensembl:ENSG00000138684 | |
TNFA | GeneProduct | ensembl:ENSG00000232810 | |
IFNG | GeneProduct | ensembl:ENSG00000111537 | |
CD4 | GeneProduct | ensembl:ENSG00000010610 | |
GZMB | GeneProduct | ensembl:ENSG00000100453 | |
IL15 | GeneProduct | ensembl:ENSG00000164136 | |
TRA | GeneProduct | ncbigene:6955 | |
DHODH | GeneProduct | ensembl:ENSG00000102967 | |
EGFR | GeneProduct | ensembl:ENSG00000146648 | |
F2RL1 | GeneProduct | ensembl:ENSG00000164251 | 'PAR2' in source |
ITGB7 | GeneProduct | ensembl:ENSG00000139626 | |
ITGA4 | GeneProduct | ensembl:ENSG00000115232 |
References
- Celiac disease: New therapies on the horizon. Dieckman T, Koning F, Bouma G. Curr Opin Pharmacol. 2022 Oct;66:102268. PubMed Europe PMC Scholia