4.8 Review

Pathophysiology of Skin Resident Memory T Cells

Journal

FRONTIERS IN IMMUNOLOGY
Volume 11, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2020.618897

Keywords

skin; resident memory T cell; skin immunity; psoriasis; vitiligo; cutaneous T cell lymphoma; fixed drug eruption

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Skin T-RM cells are long-term resident immune cells in the skin that can be reactivated upon reinfection with the same antigen, and play different functions in various pathological conditions.
Tissue resident memory T (T-RM) cells reside in peripheral, non-lymphoid tissues such as the skin, where they act as alarm-sensor cells or cytotoxic cells. Physiologically, skin T-RM cells persist for a long term and can be reactivated upon reinfection with the same antigen, thus serving as peripheral sentinels in the immune surveillance network. CD8(+)CD69(+)CD103(+) T-RM cells are the well-characterized subtype that develops in the epidermis. The local mediators such as interleukin (IL)-15 and transforming growth factor (TGF)-beta are required for the formation of long-lived T-RM cell population in skin. Skin T-RM cells engage virus-infected cells, proliferate in situ in response to local antigens and do not migrate out of the epidermis. Secondary T-RM cell populations are derived from pre-existing T-RM cells and newly recruited T-RM precursors from the circulation. In addition to microbial pathogens, topical application of chemical allergen to skin causes delayed-type hypersensitivity and amplifies the number of antigen-specific CD8(+) T-RM cells at challenged site. Skin T-RM cells are also involved in the pathological conditions, including vitiligo, psoriasis, fixed drug eruption and cutaneous T-cell lymphoma (CTCL). The functions of these T-RM cells seem to be different, depending on each pathology. Psoriasis plaques are seen in a recurrent manner especially at the originally affected sites. Upon stimulation of the skin of psoriasis patients, the CD8(+)CD103(+)CD49a(-) T-RM cells in the epidermis seem to be reactivated and initiate IL-17A production. Meanwhile, autoreactive CD8(+)CD103(+)CD49a(+) T-RM cells secreting interferon-gamma are present in lesional vitiligo skin. Fixed drug eruption is another disease where skin T-RM cells evoke its characteristic clinical appearance upon administration of a causative drug. Intraepidermal CD8(+) T-RM cells with an effector-memory phenotype resident in the skin lesions of fixed drug eruption play a major contributing role in the development of localized tissue damage. CTCL develops primarily in the skin by a clonal expansion of a transformed T-RM cells. CD8(+) CTCL with the pagetoid epidermotropic histology is considered to originate from epidermal CD8(+) T-RM cells. This review will discuss the current understanding of skin T-RM biology and their contribution to skin homeostasis and diseases.

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