New research from the Snow Center for Immune Health challenges long-held assumptions about autoimmune diseases and reveals that celiac disease may be caused not just by an overactive immune system, but by subtle defects in the function of immune cells.
Published in Immunology and cell biologythis study found consistent changes in the behavior of immune cells in patients with celiac disease, and the differences can appear long before symptoms develop.
Researchers have identified distinct patterns in early immune responses that may help predict autoimmune risk and support more personalized monitoring and care in the future.
At a glance
- new research results Patients with celiac disease show small but consistent differences in immune cell function, indicating that risk may be linked to immune system behavior even before symptoms develop.
- CD4 helper T cells had weaker signaling, slower activation, and decreased survival. This challenges the idea that autoimmunity is simply an exaggerated immune response.
- These findings may extend beyond celiac disease and may provide insight into a broader range of autoimmune and inflammatory diseases.
This new study was led by Dr Vanessa Bryant, Professor Phil Hodgkin and Dr Suzanne Heinsel, with the clinical expertise of Snow Center Director Professor Jason Tidin.
The study looked at a type of immune cell known as CD4 helper T cells, which coordinate immune responses, fight infections, and support antibody production.
“Our analysis is similar to winding up a toy and leaving it alone to see how long it moves and what tricks it performs.
“Our method reveals how well T cells read and store activation signals to maintain their ‘momentum’ even after the original stimulus wears off, and whether people with autoimmune diseases have built-in differences in the function of their cells.”
Measuring the “power” of immunity
To investigate this, the researchers used the center’s pioneering Cyton2 Cell Timer model, which tracks immune cell activity over time.
The aim was to track the “momentum” of T cells. Rather than continuously stimulating the cells as in most clinical tests, the researchers activated the cells temporarily and removed all signals to see what happened next.
This allows us to see how the cell behaves after the initial push has stopped. Characteristics that are difficult to detect under constant stimulation become apparent. ”
Dr. Vanessa Bryant, Walter and Eliza Hall Institute
The researchers measured how cells divide, survive and produce key signaling molecules, building a detailed picture of early immune behavior.
Dr. Bryant said this approach is a completely unique way to measure immune responses and gives researchers new insight into how immune responses go awry.
“Understanding these early defects may lead to better ways to predict risk, monitor disease, and ultimately develop treatments that not only manage symptoms through a gluten-free diet but also restore a healthy immune balance.”
amazing results
Contrary to expectations, the immune cells of patients with celiac disease were not simply overactive. Instead, they had a weaker response.
This study found CD4 helper T cells in patients with celiac disease.
- Decreased production of interleukin-2, an important immune signaling molecule
- Cells enter division more slowly
- the chance of survival was low
“These differences were subtle but surprisingly consistent,” Dr. Bryant said.
Remarkably, the same pattern emerged regardless of gender, whether newly diagnosed or managing symptoms with a gluten-free diet.
“This shows that the effects are not simply caused by inflammation or diet,” Dr. Bryant said. “This suggests fundamental differences that may be associated with genetic risk.”
Possibilities beyond a single disease
Although this study focused on celiac disease, the findings may have broader relevance.
Autoimmune diseases affect approximately 5% of the population, many of whom share overlapping genetic risk factors.
“If autoimmune risk is partially built into the behavior of immune cells from the beginning, it could change the way we think about early detection,” Dr. Bryant said.
Although this approach is a research tool rather than a clinical trial, it opens the door for combining genetic information with functional immune measurements to better predict disease risk.
Changing perspectives on immune health
Professor Taidin said this study highlights the power of the Snow Center’s Cyton ‘Celltimer’ model to reveal hidden patterns in immune function.
“This provides a new way to understand immune behavior in more detail. My hope is that these fundamental insights will eventually be translated into clinically useful tools that will inform the assessment of disease risk.”
Rather than focusing solely on immune cells that directly damage tissues, this study highlights the importance of cells that regulate and maintain immune responses.
“These helper cells have not always been a major focus in autoimmunity research, but they may hold important clues as to why some people develop the disease and others do not,” Professor Taidin said.
The research team is now investigating whether similar immune patterns exist for other autoimmune diseases and how these differences emerge early in life.
“Our long-term goal is to understand autoimmune risk well enough to be able to act early, and in some cases before the disease starts,” Professor Taidin said.
sauce:
Walter and Eliza Hall Institute
Reference magazines:
Falcione, A.J. Others. (2026). Functional immune profiling reveals CD4 + T cell dysregulation in celiac disease. Immunology and cell biology. DOI: 10.1111/imcb.70132. https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/imcb.70132

