Therapeutic and Diagnostic Implications of T Cell Scarring in Celiac Disease and Beyond

Abstract

Few therapeutic and diagnostic tools specifically aim at T cells in autoimmune disorders, but are T cells a narrow target in these diseases? Lessons may be learned from celiac disease (CeD), one of the few autoimmune disorders where the T cell driving antigens are known, i.e. dietary gluten proteins. T cell clonotypes specific to gluten are expanded, persist for decades and express a distinct phenotype in CeD patients. Cells with this phenotype are increased also in other autoimmune conditions. Accordingly, disease-specific CD4+ T cells form an immunological scar in CeD and probably other autoimmune disorders. We discuss approaches how such T cells may be targeted for better treatment and diagnosis via their antigen specificity or via their expression of characteristic phenotypic markers

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