Project description:Celiac disease is a chronic immune-mediated disorder with an important genetic component. To date, there are 57 independent association signals from 39 non-HLA loci, and a total of 66 candidate genes have been proposed. We aimed to scrutinize the functional implication of 45 of those genes by analyzing their expression in the disease tissue of celiac patients (at diagnosis/treatment) compared to non-celiac controls. The sample set consisted of 15 CD children at diagnosis (on a gluten-containing diet, with CD associated antibodies, atrophy of intestinal villi and crypt hyperplasia), and the same patients in remission after being treated with GFD for >2 years (asymptomatic, antibody negative, and normalized intestinal epithelium at that time), plus 15 tissue samples from non-celiac individuals not suffering from inflammation at the time of endoscopy used as controls
Project description:Potential celiac diseasase (PCD) is characterized by a positive celiac disease (CD) serology and a normal small intestinal mucosa. This particular condition is usually considered a clinical challenge because, although its diagnostic criteria are clear, many questions are still unsettled. Therefore, given that PCD is a valuable biological model of the pathway leading to small intestinal mucosal damage in genetically predisposed individuals, the aim of our study is to evaluate whether immunological, microbial and lipid signatures could better characterize the PCD from the CD condition.
Project description:We collected 19 duodenal biopsies of children and adults with celiac disease and compared the expression of 38 selected genes between each other and with the observed in 13 non-celiac disease controls matched by age. qPCR gene expression profiling. Intestinal samples from children and adults with active celiac disease patients and controls were analysed.