Poster Presentation Australasian Society for Immunology Annual Scientific Meeting 2014

Cross-reactivity of a ubiquitous barley-specific T cell population accounts for the immuno-stimulatory effects of oats in coeliac disease (#307)

Melinda Hardy 1 , Jason Tye-Din 1 , Jessica Stewart 1 , Frederike Schmitz 1 , Nadine Dudek 2 , Iresha Hanchapola 3 , Anthony Purcell 2 , Robert Anderson 4
  1. Immunology Division, The Walter and Eliza Hall Institute of Medical Research, Melbourne, VIC, Australia
  2. Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Monash University, Clayton, VIC, Australia
  3. Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Monash University, Clayton, VIC, Australia
  4. ImmusanT, Inc., Cambridge, MA, USA

Background and aims: Celiac disease (CD) is a common CD4+ T cell mediated enteropathy driven by gluten in wheat, rye, and barley. Whilst clinical feeding studies generally support the safety of oats ingestion in CD, the avenin protein from oats can stimulate intestinal gluten-reactive T cells isolated from some CD patients in vitro. Our objective was to establish whether ingestion of oats or other grains toxic in CD stimulate an avenin-specific T cell response in vivo.

Methods: We fed participants a meal of oats (100g/day over 3 days) to measure the in vivo polyclonal avenin-specific T cell responses to peptides contained within comprehensive avenin peptide libraries in 73 HLA-DQ2.5+ CD patients. Grain cross-reactivity was investigated using oral challenge with wheat, barley, and rye.

Results: Avenin-specific responses were observed in 6/73 HLA-DQ2.5+ CD patients (8%), against four closely related peptides. Oral barley challenge efficiently induced cross-reactive avenin/hordein-specific T cells in most CD patients, whereas wheat or rye challenge did not. In vitro, immunogenic avenin peptides were susceptible to digestive endopeptidases and showed weak HLA-DQ2.5 binding stability.

Conclusions: Our findings indicate that CD patients possess T cells capable of responding to immuno-dominant hordein epitopes and homologous avenin peptides ex vivo, but the frequency and consistency of these T cells in blood is substantially higher after oral challenge with barley compared to oats. The low rates of T cell activation after a substantial oats challenge (100g/d) suggests that doses of oats commonly consumed are insufficient to cause clinical relapse, and supports the safety of oats demonstrated in long-term feeding studies.