Melinda Y Hardy, Amy K Russell, Lee M Henneken, Greg Tanner, Ferenc Bekes, Ian Brown, Allan Motyer, Sam W Z Olechnowicz, Hugh H Reid, Jamie Rossjohn, Jason A Tye-Din
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Background: Oat ingestion in coeliac disease (CD) is generally regarded as safe but can trigger enteropathy and T cells specific for oat avenin in the gut and blood of some individuals.
Objective: To correlate immune and clinical outcomes to oats, purified avenin and oat feeding studies were performed to examine symptoms, T-cell immunity and intestinal histology in CD.
Design: 33 treated HLA-DQ2.5+ adult CD patients underwent single-bolus or 6-week oat avenin or 3-month whole oats ingestion. T cell activation after avenin ingestion was measured using serum interleukin 2 (IL-2), a sensitive and specific biomarker of gluten-induced T cell activation and symptoms in CD. Symptom measures, intestinal histology, and immune studies on blood and duodenum were undertaken.
Results: Among 29 CD participants, avenin induced dose-dependent T-cell activation in 11 (38%) and acute symptoms in 17 (59%). Higher IL-2 levels correlated with more severe symptoms. A single highly symptomatic patient vomited in response to avenin (1/29; 3%) and exhibited a striking pro-inflammatory cytokine profile similar to wheat-induced responses. Avenin increased the frequency of CD38-expressing tetramer+integrin β7+ T effector memory CD4+ T cells in the blood, however symptoms, IL-2 release and tetramer frequency fell following 6-week avenin intake and no enteropathy was observed.
Conclusion: Gluten-contamination-free oats can trigger acute dose-dependent immune and symptom responses but usually at a level insufficient to cause sustained symptoms or enteropathy. In 1 of 29 (3%) participants, oat avenin triggered a pro-inflammatory wheat-like response, highlighting that a minority of CD patients may need to exclude oats. Informed choice regarding oats ingestion in CD is important.
期刊介绍:
Gut is a renowned international journal specializing in gastroenterology and hepatology, known for its high-quality clinical research covering the alimentary tract, liver, biliary tree, and pancreas. It offers authoritative and current coverage across all aspects of gastroenterology and hepatology, featuring articles on emerging disease mechanisms and innovative diagnostic and therapeutic approaches authored by leading experts.
As the flagship journal of BMJ's gastroenterology portfolio, Gut is accompanied by two companion journals: Frontline Gastroenterology, focusing on education and practice-oriented papers, and BMJ Open Gastroenterology for open access original research.