4.5 Article

Evidence for a role of autoinflammation in early-phase psoriasis

Journal

CLINICAL AND EXPERIMENTAL IMMUNOLOGY
Volume 198, Issue 3, Pages 283-291

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1111/cei.13370

Keywords

autoinflammatory disease; cytokines; neutrophils; skin

Categories

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Psoriasis is a common, inflammatory immune-mediated skin disease mainly presenting with plaques whose pathogenesis is based on the central role of the interleukin (IL)-23/IL-17 axis. However, the mechanisms acting in papular lesions of early-phase psoriasis are not fully understood. The aim of this study was to assess the involvement of autoinflammation, a state of sterile inflammation mainly driven by IL-1 over-production that has been recently hypothesized to act in the early phase of disease. Lesional skin of 10 patients with recent onset, untreated psoriasis has been investigated for expression of IL-1 beta, IL-17, IL-23 and other cytokines involved in the disease in comparison with normal skin of 10 healthy controls using a protein array method. Immunohistochemical phenotyping of inflammatory infiltrate and co-localization experiments with immunofluorescence confocal microscopy were conducted. IL-1 beta was significantly more expressed in psoriasis than in normal skin (P < 0 center dot 0001). The chemokine IL-8 was also over-expressed in psoriasis (P = 0 center dot 03) while IL-12, IL-17, IL-23, tumour necrosis factor-alpha and interferon-gamma were only slightly more expressed in psoriasis than in normal skin, without reaching statistical significance. The inflammatory infiltrate consisted mainly of neutrophils with a relevant number of macrophages and dendritic cells and only scattered, predominantly T helper 1 lymphocytes. IL-1 beta co-localized mainly with CD66b, a neutrophil marker, suggesting that neutrophils were the major source of this cytokine. IL-1 beta over-expression in combination with low expression of cytokines that are predominant in late-phase plaque psoriasis may support the role of autoinflammation in early-phase disease, possibly paving the way to randomized trials with IL-1 antagonists.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.5
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available