| Literature DB >> 29572462 |
Stefanos Voglis1, Sonja Moos1, Luise Kloos1, Florian Wanke1, Morad Zayoud1, Penelope Pelczar2, Anastasios D Giannou2, Silvia Pezer3, Michael Albers4, Felix Luessi5, Samuel Huber2, Knut Schäkel3, Florian C Kurschus6,7.
Abstract
IL-22 is a potent pro-inflammatory cytokine upregulated in psoriasis and in other inflammatory diseases. The function of IL-22 is regulated by the soluble scavenging receptor, IL-22 binding protein (IL-22BP or IL-22RA2). However, the role and regulation of IL-22BP itself in the pathogenesis of inflammatory disease remain unclear. We used the TLR7 agonist Imiquimod (IMQ) to induce a psoriasis-like skin disease in mice and found a strong downregulation of IL-22BP in the affected skin as well as in the lymph nodes of animals treated with IMQ. We also analysed psoriatic skin of patients and compared this to skin of healthy donors. Interestingly, IL-22BP expression was similarly downregulated in skin biopsies of psoriasis patients compared to the skin of healthy donors. Since IL-22BP is expressed foremost in dendritic cells, we characterized its expression in monocyte-derived dendritic cells (MoDC) during maturation. In this way, we found Prostaglandin E2 (PGE2) to be a potent suppressor of IL-22BP expression in vitro. We conclude that regulation of IL-22BP by inflammatory mediators is an important step for the progression of inflammation in the skin and possibly also in other autoimmune diseases.Entities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29572462 PMCID: PMC5865214 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-018-23510-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Downregulated IL-22BP expression in IMQ-induced psoriasis mice. (A) Dorsal skin thickness, erythema and scaling were scored daily and cleared to a modified PASI score. (IMQ and Sham treated mice each n = 5). (B) Representative dorsal skin of Sham- and IMQ-treated mice on day 6. (C) Quantitative RT-PCR from homogenates of dorsal skin and sdLN for the IL-22BP gene in IMQ and Sham-treated mice. Expression levels are shown relative to the housekeeping gene HPRT. (D,E) Quantitative RT-PCR from homogenates of dorsal skin and sdLN for the IL-22BP (D) and IL-22 (E) gene in IMQ-treated mice on day 4 and day 6 of disease course. For comparison the expression is shown for Sham treated mice, too. Expression levels are shown relative to the housekeeping gene HPRT.
Figure 2IL-22BP expression in human skin, and its expression pattern in lesional skin of psoriasis patients. (A) RT-PCR and subsequent gel electrophoresis from whole IL-22BP transcript of human skin. iMoDC as positive- mMoDC as negative-controls. GAPDH as internal control. (B) Quantitative RT-PCR from homogenates of skin biopsies from healthy controls (n = 12) or patients with psoriasis vulgaris (n = 9). The IL-22BP expression levels are shown relative to the housekeeping gene GAPDH.
Figure 3Regulation of IL-22BP expression in human MoDC. Quantitative RT-PCR from monocyte-derived DC (MoDC). Immature (i)MoDC were stimulated with different maturation-inducing cytokine combinations or with all necessary cytokines to generate mature (m)MoDC. IL-22BP expression levels are shown relative to housekeeping gene GAPDH (A) or DIMT1 (B,C). (A) Maturation of iMoDC leads to downregulation of IL-22BP. (B,C) Different cytokine combinations provoke IL-22BP downregulation by inducing maturation of iMoDC. (C) Upregulation of the DC maturation marker CD83 correlates with decreased expression of IL-22BP in MoDC upon stimulation. Quantitative RT-PCR for IL-22BP is shown on the left axis using black bars. Flow cytometric analysis of the DC maturation marker CD83 in stimulated MoDC; CD83 expression shown in percentage of CD11c+ cells on the right Y-axis with orange circles. (D) IMQ does not influence IL-22BP expressed on MoDCs. iMoDCs were stimulated either with PGE2 or IMQ (100 ng/mL) or with both. No effect on IL-22BP mRNA expression by IMQ was observed.
Figure 4Inhibition of PGE2 synthesis with the NSAID Solaraze® and its effect on IL-22BP expression. (A) Quantitative RT-PCR from homogenates of dorsal skin for the COX-2 gene in IMQ treated mice on day 4 and day 6 of the disease course. For comparison, the expression is also shown for Sham treated mice. Expression levels are shown relative to the housekeeping gene HPRT. (B) Treatment scheme: 7 subsequent days pre-treatment of the mice with either Solaraze® or Sham gel. On day 8, additional parallel treatment with IMQ to induce the psoriasis-like skin disorder. (C) Representative dorsal skin and ears of Sham/IMQ and Solaraze®/IMQ treated mice on day 5 of IMQ treatment. (D) Dorsal skin thickness, erythema and scaling were scored daily and combined as a modified PASI score. In addition, change of weight and ear thickness (relative to day 1), as well as erythema (on a score from 0–4) are shown. (E) Flow cytometric analysis of single cell suspensions from digested ears of Sham/IMQ and Solaraze®/IMQ treated mice: Neutrophils (Gr-1+F4/80−) and macrophages (Gr-1− F4/80+) are pre-gated on living CD19−, CD3ε−, CD45.2+, MHC-II− and CD11b+ cells. Shown are representative plots. Bar graphs indicate neutrophil and macrophage infiltration in percentage to CD45.2+ cells. (F) Quantitative RT-PCR from homogenates of dorsal skin and sdLN for IL-22BP mRNA in Sham/IMQ and Solaraze®/Sham-treated mice. For comparison, the expression is also shown for Sham-treated mice. Expression levels are shown relative to the housekeeping gene HPRT.