Celiac disease is a life-long intestinal autoimmune disease, characterized by the gluten intolerance and chronic enteric inflammation. Traditionally presented by intestinal manifestations, however, a shift toward extra intestinal presentation is taking place. One of the affected organs is the nervous systems presented by neuropsychiatric manifestations, hence the mechanism and pathways are not clear. The presence of neuronal and alpha-enolases and their corresponding antibodies were noticed in the mucosa and serum of celiac disease patients, as well as in other various autoimmune diseases with psycho-neurological manifestations. The aims of the present review are to screen the literature on different isoforms of enolase, mainly alpha enolase, and their specific antibodies and to suggest their potential pathophysiological mechanisms relaying the enolases to intestinal or extraintestinal celiac disease manifestations. The shared aspects between the enolases and celiac disease and the cross-talks between alpha-enolase and tissue transglutaminase suggest new potential pathophysiological mechanisms that might drive celiac disease evolvement.

Original languageEnglish
Article number100109
Number of pages6
JournalJournal of Translational Autoimmunity
Volume4
DOIs
StatePublished - Jun 2021

    Scopus subject areas

  • Immunology and Allergy
  • Immunology

    Research areas

  • Anti-alpha-enolase, Autoimmune disease, Celiac disease, Extraintestinal manifestation, Gluten, Neuron-specific enolase, CARCINOID-TUMOR, ANTIBODIES, AUTOANTIBODIES, PROTEIN, CROHNS-DISEASE, TRANSGLUTAMINASE, SMALL-BOWEL, CEREBROSPINAL-FLUID, IDENTIFICATION, NEURON-SPECIFIC ENOLASE

ID: 78086694