# Mechanisms and Markers of Small Intestinal Epithelial Injury and Villous Atrophy

> **NIH NIH K23** · BOSTON CHILDREN'S HOSPITAL · 2020 · $194,549

## Abstract

PROJECT SUMMARY
Mucosal remodeling with villous atrophy is a generic response to small intestinal injury with many causes that
require different treatments. While easily recognized on intestinal biopsy specimens, determining the specific
cause of villous atrophy is more challenging and often leads to therapeutic delays. This Career Development
Award is based upon the hypothesis that transcriptomics can both elucidate mechanisms of villous atrophy
across diseases and provide improved tools for diagnosis and monitoring. Jocelyn A. Silvester, MD PhD is
Instructor at Harvard Medical School and a subspecialist within the Celiac Disease Program at Boston
Children's Hospital. She has gained substantial basic and clinical research experience during her doctoral and
medical training and has demonstrated commitment to an academic career in patient oriented research.
This Career Development Award will provide additional mentored training and research opportunities in
bioinformatics and mucosal immunology for Dr Silvester to advance her quantitative research skills while
addressing the current knowledge gap related to mechanisms of small intestinal epithelial injury and the lack of
disease-specific biomarkers of villous atrophy. Dr Ciarán Kelly, an acknowledged expert in celiac disease and
intestinal inflammation, and Dr Isaac Kohane, an expert in bioinformatics and quantitative biology, will serve as
mentors. In addition an Advisory Committee comprised of experts across multiple relevant disciplines (Drs
Leffler, Lencer, Goldsmith, and Fasano) will meet with the applicant and mentors regularly to assess progress.
This award will aid Dr Silvester in establishing an independent research program as an academic physician-
scientist through a structured training plan that includes formal course work in bioinformatics and statistics, as
well as relevant clinical research in functional genomics. She will also receive additional training in quantitative
interpretation of intestinal histology and grant writing to facilitate her goal of using insights from large-scale
genomic data to improve diagnosis, treatment, and outcomes for patients with celiac disease and other
enteropathies. The research at the foundation of this application aims to characterize the different mechanisms
leading to villous atrophy and to identify a molecular signature of celiac disease activity in peripheral blood.
Celiac disease will be used as a model to study the time course of changes occurring as villous atrophy recurs
during gluten challenge in celiac patients who had recovered on a gluten-free diet. Additionally, comparative
transcriptomic studies will be performed using intestinal tissue from patients with celiac disease, adult-onset
autoimmune enteropathy and drug-induced (olmesartan) enteropathy. Finally, we will study peripheral blood
mRNA markers of villous atrophy in participants in our ongoing Manitoba Celiac Disease Cohort study
undergoing protocol biopsy 24 months after startin...

## Key facts

- **NIH application ID:** 9858327
- **Project number:** 5K23DK119584-02
- **Recipient organization:** BOSTON CHILDREN'S HOSPITAL
- **Principal Investigator:** Jocelyn Anne Silvester
- **Activity code:** K23 (R01, R21, SBIR, etc.)
- **Funding institute:** NIH
- **Fiscal year:** 2020
- **Award amount:** $194,549
- **Award type:** 5
- **Project period:** 2019-03-07 → 2024-02-29

## Primary source

NIH RePORTER: https://reporter.nih.gov/project-details/9858327

## Citation

> US National Institutes of Health, RePORTER application 9858327, Mechanisms and Markers of Small Intestinal Epithelial Injury and Villous Atrophy (5K23DK119584-02). Retrieved via AI Analytics 2026-05-24 from https://api.ai-analytics.org/grant/nih/9858327. Licensed CC0.

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