Efficacy of Chemokine Receptor Inhibition in Treating IL-36α–Induced Psoriasiform Inflammation
Author(s) -
James J. Campbell,
Karen Ebsworth,
Linda Ertl,
Jeffrey McMahon,
Yu Wang,
Simon Yau,
Venkat Mali,
Vicky Chhina,
Alice Kumamoto,
Shirley Liu,
Ton Dang,
Dale Newland,
Israel Charo,
Penglie Zhang,
Thomas J. Schall,
Rajinder Singh
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
the journal of immunology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.737
H-Index - 372
eISSN - 1550-6606
pISSN - 0022-1767
DOI - 10.4049/jimmunol.1801519
Subject(s) - chemokine , inflammation , chemokine receptor , medicine , interleukin 23 , psoriasis , cc chemokine receptors , c c chemokine receptor type 6 , immunology , pharmacology , interleukin 17
Several types of psoriasiform dermatitis are associated with increased IL-36 cytokine activity in the skin. A rare, but severe, psoriasis-like disorder, generalized pustular psoriasis (GPP), is linked to loss-of-function mutations in the gene encoding IL-36RA, an important negative regulator of IL-36 signaling. To understand the effects of IL-36 dysregulation in a mouse model, we studied skin inflammation induced by intradermal injections of preactivated IL-36α. We found the immune cells infiltrating IL-36α-injected mouse skin to be of dramatically different composition than those infiltrating imiquimod-treated skin. The IL-36α-induced leukocyte population comprised nearly equal numbers of CD4 + αβ T cells, neutrophils, and inflammatory dendritic cells, whereas the imiquimod-induced population comprised γδ T cells and neutrophils. Ligands for chemokine receptors CCR6 and CXCR2 are increased in both GPP and IL-36α-treated skin, which led us to test an optimized small-molecule antagonist (CCX624) targeting CCR6 and CXCR2 in the IL-36α model. CCX624 significantly reduced the T cell, neutrophil, and inflammatory dendritic cell infiltrates and was more effective than saturating levels of an anti-IL-17RA mAb at reducing inflammatory symptoms. These findings put CCR6 and CXCR2 forward as novel targets for a mechanistically distinct therapeutic approach for inflammatory skin diseases involving dysregulated IL-36 signaling, such as GPP.
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