IL-17 Induces an Expanded Range of Downstream Genes in Reconstituted Human Epidermis Model
Author(s) -
Andrea Chiricozzi,
Kristine Nograles,
Leanne M. Johnson-Huang,
Judilyn FuentesDuculan,
Irma Cardinale,
Kathleen M. Bonifacio,
Nicholas Gulati,
Hiroshi Mitsui,
Emma GuttmanYassky,
Mayte SuárezFariñas,
James G. Krueger
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
plos one
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.99
H-Index - 332
ISSN - 1932-6203
DOI - 10.1371/journal.pone.0090284
Subject(s) - psoriasis , downregulation and upregulation , interleukin 17 , cytokine , keratinocyte , inflammation , biology , epidermis (zoology) , immunology , interleukin 20 , microbiology and biotechnology , interleukin , cancer research , gene , in vitro , genetics , anatomy , interleukin 5
Background IL-17 is the defining cytokine of the Th17, Tc17, and γδ T cell populations that plays a critical role in mediating inflammation and autoimmunity. Psoriasis vulgaris is an inflammatory skin disease mediated by Th1 and Th17 cytokines with relevant contributions of IFN-γ, TNF-α, and IL-17. Despite the pivotal role IL-17 plays in psoriasis, and in contrast to the other key mediators involved in the psoriasis cytokine cascade that are capable of inducing broad effects on keratinocytes, IL-17 was demonstrated to regulate the expression of a limited number of genes in monolayer keratinocytes cultured in vitro. Methodology/Principal Findings Given the clinical efficacy of anti-IL-17 agents is associated with an impressive reduction in a large set of inflammatory genes, we sought a full-thickness skin model that more closely resemble in vivo epidermal architecture. Using a reconstructed human epidermis (RHE), IL-17 was able to upregulate 419 gene probes and downregulate 216 gene probes. As possible explanation for the increased gene induction in the RHE model is that C/CAAT-enhancer-binding proteins (C/EBP) -β, the transcription factor regulating IL-17-responsive genes, is expressed preferentially in differentiated keratinocytes. Conclusions/Significance The genes identified in IL-17-treated RHE are likely relevant to the IL-17 effects in psoriasis, since ixekizumab (anti-IL-17A agent) strongly suppressed the “RHE” genes in psoriasis patients treated in vivo with this IL-17 antagonist.
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