| Literature DB >> 17603494 |
Curdin Conrad1, Onur Boyman, Giulia Tonel, Adrian Tun-Kyi, Ute Laggner, Antonin de Fougerolles, Victor Kotelianski, Humphrey Gardner, Frank O Nestle.
Abstract
Psoriasis is a common T cell-mediated autoimmune inflammatory disease. We show that blocking the interaction of alpha1beta1 integrin (VLA-1) with collagen prevented accumulation of epidermal T cells and immunopathology of psoriasis. Alpha1beta1 integrin, a major collagen-binding surface receptor, was exclusively expressed by epidermal but not dermal T cells. Alpha1beta1-positive T cells showed characteristic surface markers of effector memory cells and contained high levels of interferon-gamma but not interleukin-4. Blockade of alpha1beta1 inhibited migration of T cells into the epidermis in a clinically relevant xenotransplantation model. This was paralleled by a complete inhibition of psoriasis development, comparable to that caused by tumor necrosis factor-alpha blockers. These results define a crucial role for alpha1beta1 in controlling the accumulation of epidermal type 1 polarized effector memory T cells in a common human immunopathology and provide the basis for new strategies in psoriasis treatment focusing on T cell-extracellular matrix interactions.Entities:
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Year: 2007 PMID: 17603494 DOI: 10.1038/nm1605
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Med ISSN: 1078-8956 Impact factor: 53.440