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Query: UMLS:C0021831 (
enteropathy
)
4,403
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The properties, tissue and cellular distribution of intestinal
transglutaminase
have been investigated. Transglutaminase was assayed with dimethylcasein and [14C]putrescine as substrates. The enzyme has maximum activity at pH 10, although more reliable assays are made at pH 9. Transglutaminase showed an absolute requirement for Ca2+ and exhibited linear assay kinetics. The Km for putrescine was approx. 0.15 mmol/l. Tissue distribution studies suggest
transglutaminase
is more active in the more muscular segments of the gut. The cellular localization in jejunum was investigated by sequential cell release techniques. Approximately 2 per cent of the total activity was found in the enterocytes and crypt cells. Most of the activity was in the submucosa and serosa suggesting an interstitial cell localization. Acute hypoplastic
enteropathy
induced by methotrexate was accompanied by a striking decrease in mucosal
transglutaminase
but the activity returned to control values by 72 h. There was no significant increase in activity during the period of intense crypt cell hyperplasia and it is concluded that intestinal
transglutaminase
is not implicated in crypt cell proliferation.
...
PMID:Rat gastrointestinal transglutaminase: demonstration of enzyme activity and cell and tissue distributions. 287 78
In this paper we consider recent new data on the pathological features of gluten sensitivity and on the disease-associated antigens, in the context of a multistage hypothesis that we have been developing for the last five years. This incorporates concepts of oral tolerance induction, mucosal T-cell and antibody-mediated injury, and genetic contributions. Until now, there has been complete agreement that the diagnosis of celiac disease must be based on small bowel histology. There are patients with low-grade gluten-sensitive
enteropathy
, in whom the only morphological abnormality is a high count of intraepithelial lymphocytes (IEL). Some, but not all, also have positive serum IgA anti-endomysium antibody (AEA). With good techniques, in a properly accredited laboratory, in a patient suspected on clinical grounds to have celiac disease, a positive serum IgA AEA test (perhaps, alternatively, high-titer anti-
transglutaminase
by ELISA), is virtually diagnostic of the condition. Our hypothesis of a stepwise pathogenesis of severe gluten-sensitive
enteropathy
is re-examined in the light of these new data. It is evident that there are at least five different levels at which genetic influences may operate.
...
PMID:Heterogeneity of celiac disease: clinical, pathological, immunological, and genetic. 992 74
Gluten sensitivity typically presents as celiac disease, a common chronic small
intestinal disorder
. However, in certain individuals it is associated with dermatitis herpetiformis, a blistering skin disease characterized by granular IgA deposits in the papillary dermis. While tissue transglutaminase has been implicated as the major autoantigen of gluten sensitive disease, there has been no explanation as to why this condition appears in two distinct forms. Here we show that while sera from patients with either form of gluten sensitive disease react both with tissue transglutaminase and the related enzyme epidermal (type 3)
transglutaminase
, antibodies in patients having dermatitis herpetiformis show a markedly higher avidity for epidermal transglutaminase. Further, these patients have an antibody population specific for this enzyme. We also show that the IgA precipitates in the papillary dermis of patients with dermatitis herpetiformis, the defining signs of the disease, contain epidermal transglutaminase, but not tissue transglutaminase or keratinocyte transglutaminase. These findings demonstrate that epidermal transglutaminase, rather than tissue transglutaminase, is the dominant autoantigen in dermatitis herpetiformis and explain why skin symptoms appear in a proportion of patients having gluten sensitive disease.
...
PMID:Epidermal transglutaminase (TGase 3) is the autoantigen of dermatitis herpetiformis. 1190 Dec
Celiac Sprue, or gluten-sensitive
enteropathy
, is an inheritable human disease of the small intestine that is triggered by the dietary intake of gluten. Recently, several Pro- and Gln-rich peptide sequences (most notably PQPQLPY and analogs) have been identified from gluten with potent immunogenic activity toward CD4(+) T cells from small intestinal biopsies of Celiac Sprue patients. These peptides have three unusual properties. First, they are relatively stable toward further proteolysis by gastric, pancreatic, and intestinal enzymes. Second, they are recognized and deamidated by human tissue transglutaminase (tTGase) with high selectivity. Third, tTGase-catalyzed deamidation enhances their affinity for HLA-DQ2, the disease-specific class II major histocompatibility complex heterodimer. In an attempt to seek a mechanistic explanation for these properties, we undertook secondary structural studies on PQPQLPY and its analogs. Circular dichroism studies on a series of monomeric and dimeric analogs revealed a strong polyproline II helical propensity in a subset of them. Two-dimensional nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopic analysis confirmed a polyproline II conformation of PQPQLPY, and was also used to elucidate the secondary structure of the most helical variant, (D-P)QPQLPY. Remarkably, a strong correlation was observed between polyproline II content of naturally occurring gluten peptides and the specificity of human tTGase toward these substrates. Analogs with up to two D-amino acid residues retained both polyproline II helical content and
transglutaminase
affinity. Since the Michaelis constant (K(m)) is the principal determinant of tTGase specificity for naturally occurring gluten peptides and their analogs, our results suggest that the tTGase binding site may have a preference for polyproline II helical substrates. If so, these insights could be exploited for the design of selective small molecule inhibitors of this pharmacologically important enzyme.
...
PMID:Circular dichroism and nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopic analysis of immunogenic gluten peptides and their analogs. 1232 65
Gluten-sensitive enteropathy or, as it is more commonly called, celiac disease, is an autoimmune inflammatory disease of the small intestine that is precipitated by the ingestion of gluten, a component of wheat protein, in genetically susceptible persons. Exclusion of dietary gluten results in healing of the mucosa, resolution of the malabsorptive state, and reversal of most, if not all, effects of celiac disease. Recent studies in the United States suggest that the prevalence of celiac disease is approximately one case per 250 persons. Gluten-sensitive enteropathy commonly manifests as "silent" celiac disease (i.e., minimal or no symptoms). Serologic tests for antibodies against endomysium,
transglutaminase
, and gliadin identify most patients with the disease. Serologic testing should be considered in patients who are at increased genetic risk for gluten-sensitive
enteropathy
(i.e., family history of celiac disease or personal history of type I diabetes) and in patients who have chronic diarrhea, unexplained anemia, chronic fatigue, or unexplained weight loss. Early diagnosis and management are important to forestall serious consequences of malabsorption, such as osteoporosis and anemia.
...
PMID:Gluten-sensitive enteropathy (celiac disease): more common than you think. 1250 63
Intolerance of gluten, resposible for Coeliac disease, is essentially shown by an auto-immune
enteropathy
, even if the cutaneous manifestation (herpetiform dermatitis) and perhaps certain neurological signs (cerebral syndrome, peripheral neuropathy) may be independent as well as associated with the intestinal illness. This affection is of immunological nature, occuring in a genetic field that predisposes to the illness (familial form: concordance of 70% in homozygote twins; 90% of patients show an HLA molecule of type DQ2, DQ8 in almost all the other cases. The exogenous factor is the gluten content contained in wheat, rye and barley, more precisely by the intermediary "the prolamines" which are the "reactive" element that induces a the same time an inflammatory reaction of type TH11 locally (expressed by the histological aspect of a duodenal biopsy evolving as villous atrophy) and a humoral response with production of anti-gliadine and anti-
transglutaminase
antibodies (the role of the latter enzyme is intervention in the local transformation of antigens to make them antigenic). It is an illness of adults as well as children and this point must now be emphasized. Recent epidemiological studies insist on a high prevalence (1/300 in Europe). Clinical expression, at the start very polymorphic and so misleading, before the appearance of the more classical signs of malabsorption and development, always feared, towards a lymphoma. These signs are haematological (anemia of various types, hyper platelets by hyposplenism, haemorrhagic signs) cutaneous (herpetiform dermatitis, cutaneous vasculitis) mucosal (aphtose), hepatic (cytolysis), neurophysical (fatigue, troubles of behaviour, cerebral syndrome, neuropathy) and osteo-articulitis (osteopenia, arthralgias, diffuse pains). The association of certain auto-immune illnesses must be emphasized (diabetes, Hashimoto thyroiditis, Gougerot disease, primitive biliary cirrhosis). To think early of the possibility of intolerance to gluten, is to give the means of a very easy diagnosis (measurement of anti-gliadin, anti-endomysium and anti-
transglutaminase
, and secondarily duodenal biopsy if necessary), and it is early elimination of gluten food which will make the various clinical manifestations disappear and so prevent the risk of evolution to a tumoral pathology.
...
PMID:[A great imitator for the allergologist: intolerance to gluten]. 1513 80
A primary small intestinal natural killer (NK) cell lymphoma with pathologic features of
enteropathy
but lack of association with celiac disease is reported. A 37-year-old man presented with tarry stool, coffee-ground vomitus, and mild fever. He did not have chronic diarrhea or malabsorption. Segmental resection of the duodenum and jejunum showed multicentric transmural infiltration by medium-sized lymphoma cells expressing CD3, CD8, cytotoxic granules, and Epstein-Barr virus by in situ hybridization. The nontumorous mucosa away from the main tumor revealed
enteropathy
with villous blunting and increased intraepithelial lymphocytes sharing the same immunophenotype as the lymphoma cells. Both lymphoma and nontumorous areas were germline for T-cell receptor-gamma and immunoglobulin heavy chain gene rearrangement. Serologic test by ELISA was negative for anti-
transglutaminase
. The patient died of repeated gastrointestinal bleeding and sepsis at 2 months. Differential diagnosis of this unique nasal-type NK-cell lymphoma with
enteropathy
-associated T-cell lymphoma is discussed.
...
PMID:Natural killer cell lymphoma of small intestine with features of enteropathy but lack of association with celiac disease. 1513 43
Subclinical or latent cases of gluten-sensitive
enteropathy
(GSE) are difficult to diagnose, and serology-positive, histology-negative (minimal morphologic change) and serology-negative, histology-positive patients have been identified. Both, particularly the histology-negative group, require the correct diagnosis for proper management, especially because the concept of minimal histologic change GSE has escaped attention in standard textbooks. We assessed the numbers and distribution of intraepithelial T cells and their subsets with CD3, CD8, and CD4 immunostaining and examined for crypt hyperplasia with mitotic and Ki-67 proliferative indices with the aim of refining the criteria for the diagnosis of minimal change GSE. Duodenal biopsies from 46 clinically suspected cases of GSE tested for antigliadin, antiendomysium, and antitissue
transglutaminase
antibodies were divided into four groups: serology-positive, histology-positive (S+H+, n = 20); serology-positive, histology-negative (S+H-, n = 22), representing the minimal morphologic change group; serology-negative, histology-positive (S-H+, n = 4); and serology-negative, histology-negative (S-H-, n = 28), controls with histologically normal duodenal biopsies obtained for unrelated reasons. The numbers of CD3+ and CD8+ intraepithelial T cells (IETCs) were significantly higher in histology-positive biopsies with (mean, 40.3/100 and 39.3/100 enterocytes, respectively) and without positive serology (mean, 33.3/100 and 35/100 enterocytes, respectively) compared with all other groups (S+H-, mean, 26.5/100 and 24.3/100 enterocytes, respectively; S-H-, mean, 23.3/100 and 17.9/100 enterocytes, respectively). Values for Ki-67 index in crypt enterocytes were also significantly different between histology-positive and histology-negative groups (P = 0.000). The distribution of CD3+ and CD8+ IETCs was mostly even along the surface enterocytes in histology-positive cases compared with the controls, which showed an uneven distribution. The 2 parameters that significantly discriminated between minimal morphologic change GSE (S+H-) and controls (S-H-) were Ki-67 index (P = 0.007) and the distribution pattern of CD8+ IETCs (P = 0.049). CD4 IETC counts were generally low, with no significant difference between all groups. The few S-H+ cases seen most likely represented false-negative serology, because the assessed parameters of this group and S+H+ cases were indistinguishable.
...
PMID:Immunohistologic parameters in minimal morphologic change duodenal biopsies from patients with clinically suspected gluten-sensitive enteropathy. 1555 31
Coeliac disease (CoD) is a small
intestinal disorder
characterized by villous atrophy, crypt cell hyperplasia and an increased production of T helper cell type 1 (Th1) cytokines. Interleukin (IL)-18 is a pro-inflammatory cytokine that has a crucial role in maintaining the Th1 response. In this study, the serum levels of IL-18 were measured in children with CoD or other gastrointestinal diseases in order to evaluate the possibility of using IL-18 as a disease activity marker. IL-18 levels were higher in samples from CoD patients [median 443 pg/ml (148-885)] compared to healthy controls [median 205 pg/ml (11-379)], P <0.05. In contrast, the levels of IL-18 were not enhanced significantly in the serum from patients with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) [median 324 pg/ml (207-546)] or in the disease control group [median 303 pg/ml (2-689)]. In CoD patients, after 2 weeks of gluten challenge (GC), serum IL-18 was unchanged [median 268 pg/ml (59-458)] compared to patients on a gluten-free diet [median 220 pg/ml (53-600)], while IL-18 was increased after 12 weeks of GC [median 551 pg/ml (94-952)], P <0.01. The IL-18 levels correlated with IgA anti-
transglutaminase
antibody levels (rs=0.59, P=0.016) in serum from untreated CoD patients, and IL-18 also followed the degree of small intestinal villous atrophy in 12 out of 19 CoD patients. Our results support the view that serum IL-18 concentrations in children with CoD follow disease activity, suggesting a role for IL-18 in the induction of an inflammatory Th1-response after gluten exposure.
...
PMID:Enhanced interleukin-18 levels in the peripheral blood of children with coeliac disease. 1560 24
Gluten sensitivity with or without coeliac disease (CD) symptoms and intestinal pathology has been suggested as a potentially treatable cause of various diseases. CD is a chronic disease which improves on withdrawal of wheat gliadins and barley, rye and oat prolamins from the diet. There have been numerous reports linking CD with several skin conditions. A body of evidence shows that dermatitis herpetiformis is actually a cutaneous manifestation of CD. Autoimmune diseases, allergic diseases, psoriasis and miscellaneous diseases have also been described with gluten intolerance. Dermatologists should be familiar with the appraisal of gluten sensitive
enteropathy
and should be able to search for an underlying gluten intolerance (GI). Serological screening by means of antigliadin, antiendomysial and
transglutaminase
antibodies should be performed. HLA typing is often useful in association with serologic tests. Intestinal biopsy is usually needed to establish the diagnosis of CD or GI. Thus, gluten intolerance gives rise to a variety of dermatological manifestations which may benefit from a gluten-free diet.
...
PMID:Gluten intolerance and skin diseases. 1643 35
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