| Literature DB >> 27984037 |
Yi Fritz1, Philip A Klenotic1, William R Swindell2, Zhi Qiang Yin3, Sarah G Groft1, Li Zhang1, Jaymie Baliwag4, Maya I Camhi1, Doina Diaconu1, Andrew B Young1, Alexander M Foster4, Andrew Johnston4, Johann E Gudjonsson4, Thomas S McCormick5, Nicole L Ward6.
Abstract
IL-6 inhibition has been unsuccessful in treating psoriasis, despite high levels of tissue and serum IL-6 in patients. In addition, de novo psoriasis onset has been reported after IL-6 blockade in patients with rheumatoid arthritis. To explore mechanisms underlying these clinical observations, we backcrossed an established psoriasiform mouse model (IL-17C+ mice) with IL-6-deficient mice (IL-17C+KO) and examined the cutaneous phenotype. IL-17C+KO mice initially exhibited decreased skin inflammation; however, this decrease was transient and reversed rapidly, concomitant with increases in skin Tnf, Il36α/β/γ, Il24, Epgn, and S100a8/a9 to levels higher than those found in IL-17C+ mice. A comparison of IL-17C+ and IL-17C+KO mouse skin transcriptomes with that of human psoriasis skin revealed significant correlation among transcripts of skin of patients with psoriasis and IL-17C+KO mouse skin, and confirmed an exacerbation of the inflammatory signature in IL-17C+KO mice that aligns closely with human psoriasis. Transcriptional analyses of IL-17C+ and IL-17C+KO primary keratinocytes confirmed increased expression of proinflammatory molecules, suggesting that in the absence of IL-6, keratinocytes increase production of numerous additional proinflammatory cytokines. These preclinical findings may provide insight into why patients with arthritis being treated with IL-6 inhibitors develop new onset psoriasis and why IL-6 blockade for the treatment of psoriasis has not been clinically effective.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27984037 PMCID: PMC5326585 DOI: 10.1016/j.jid.2016.10.021
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Invest Dermatol ISSN: 0022-202X Impact factor: 8.551