4.8 Article

A GRHL3-regulated repair pathway suppresses immune-mediated epidermal hyperplasia

Journal

JOURNAL OF CLINICAL INVESTIGATION
Volume 124, Issue 12, Pages 5205-5218

Publisher

AMER SOC CLINICAL INVESTIGATION INC
DOI: 10.1172/JCI77138

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NIH [AR44882, T32-HD60555, 1F32AR065356-01A1, K08AR060802, LM010235, NLM T15 LM07443]
  2. Irving Weinstein Foundation
  3. National Psoriasis Foundation
  4. A. Alfred Taubman Medical Research Institute (via the Frances and Kenneth Eisenberg Emerging Scholar Award)
  5. Doris Duke Foundation
  6. American Skin Association Carson Family Research Scholar Award in Psoriasis
  7. NSF [IIS-0513376]
  8. UCI Institute for Clinical and Translational Science [UL1 TR000153]
  9. UCI Institute for Genomics and Bioinformatics

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Dermal infiltration of T cells is an important step in the onset and progression of immune-mediated skin diseases such as psoriasis; however, it is not known whether epidermal factors play a primary role in the development of these diseases. Here, we determined that the prodifferentiation transcription factor grainyhead-like 3 (GRHL3), which is essential during epidermal development, is dispensable for adult skin homeostasis, but required for barrier repair after adult epidermal injury. Consistent with activation of a GRHL3-regulated repair pathway in psoriasis, we found that GRHL3 is upregulated in lesional skin and binds known epidermal differentiation gene targets. Using an imiquimod-induced model of immune-mediated epidermal hyperplasia, we found that mice lacking GRHL3 have an exacerbated epidermal damage response, greater sensitivity to disease induction, delayed resolution of epidermal lesions, and resistance to anti-IL-22 therapy compared with WT animals. ChIP-Seq and gene expression profiling of murine skin revealed that while GRHL3 regulates differentiation pathways both during development and during repair from immune-mediated damage, it targets distinct sets of genes in the 2 processes. In particular, GRHL3 suppressed a number of alarmin and other proinflammatory genes after immune injury. This study identifies a GRHL3-regulated epidermal barrier repair pathway that suppresses disease initiation and helps resolve existing lesions in immune-mediated epidermal hyperplasia.

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