| Literature DB >> 28392462 |
Marco Diani1, Marco Galasso2, Chiara Cozzi3, Francesco Sgambelluri4, Andrea Altomare1, Clara Cigni5, Elena Frigerio1, Lorenzo Drago6, Stefano Volinia2, Francesca Granucci5, Gianfranco Altomare1, Eva Reali7.
Abstract
Blood to skin recirculation could play a role in the pathogenesis of psoriasis. To investigate this possibility we dissected the phenotype of circulating T cells in psoriasis patients, calculated the correlation the clinical parameters of the disease and performed a parallel bioinformatics analysis of gene expression data in psoriatic skin. We found that circulating CCR6+ CD4+ TEM and TEFF cells significantly correlated with systemic inflammation. Conversely, the percentage of CXCR3+ CD4+ TEM cells negatively correlated with the severity of the cutaneous disease. Importantly CLA+ CD4+ TCM cells expressing CCR6+ or CCR4+CXCR3+ negatively correlated with psoriasis severity suggesting recruitment to the skin compartment. This assumption was reinforced by gene expression data showing marked increase of CCR7 and CLA-encoding gene SELPLG expression in psoriatic skin and strong association of their expression. The data enlightens a role for CD4+ T cells trafficking between blood and skin in cutaneous and systemic manifestations of psoriasis.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28392462 DOI: 10.1016/j.clim.2017.04.001
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Immunol ISSN: 1521-6616 Impact factor: 3.969