4.6 Article

Keratinocytes Regulate the Threshold of Inflammation by Inhibiting T Cell Effector Functions

Journal

CELLS
Volume 10, Issue 7, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/cells10071606

Keywords

keratinocytes; T cells; T cell effector functions; skin immune homeostasis; skin barrier

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The study found that keratinocytes partially inhibit T cell proliferation and cytokine production, with this effect depending on the keratinocyte/T cell ratio and soluble factors. This shows that keratinocytes play a critical role in controlling inflammatory processes in the skin.
Whilst the importance of keratinocytes as a first-line defense has been widely investigated, little is known about their interactions with non-resident immune cells. In this study, the impact of human keratinocytes on T cell effector functions was analyzed in an antigen-specific in vitro model of allergic contact dermatitis (ACD) to nickel sulfate. Keratinocytes partially inhibited T cell proliferation and cytokine production. This effect was dependent on the keratinocyte/T cell ratio and was partially reversible by increasing the number of autologous dendritic cells. The inhibition of T cell proliferation by keratinocytes was independent of the T cell subtype and antigen presentation by different professional antigen-presenting cells. Autologous and heterologous keratinocytes showed comparable effects, while the fixation of keratinocytes with paraformaldehyde abrogated the immunosuppressive effect. The separation of keratinocytes and T cells by a transwell chamber, as well as a cell-free keratinocyte supernatant, inhibited T cell effector functions to the same amount as directly co-cultured keratinocytes, thus proving that soluble factor/s account for the observed suppressive effects. In conclusion, keratinocytes critically control the threshold of inflammatory processes in the skin by inhibiting T cell proliferation and cytokine production.

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