4.6 Article

Epidermal Th22 and Tc17 Cells Form a Localized Disease Memory in Clinically Healed Psoriasis

期刊

JOURNAL OF IMMUNOLOGY
卷 192, 期 7, 页码 3111-3120

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AMER ASSOC IMMUNOLOGISTS
DOI: 10.4049/jimmunol.1302313

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资金

  1. Swedish Research Council [2009-2357]
  2. Ake Wiberg Foundation
  3. Svenska Lakaresallskapet
  4. Harald and Greta Jeansson Foundation
  5. Karolinska Institutet, Psoriasisfonden and Hudfonden
  6. Pfizer
  7. Janssen-Cilag

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Psoriasis is a common and chronic inflammatory skin disease in which T cells play a key role. Effective treatment heals the skin without scarring, but typically psoriasis recurs in previously affected areas. A pathogenic memory within the skin has been proposed, but the nature of such site-specific disease memory is unknown. Tissue-resident memory T (T-RM) cells have been ascribed a role in immunity after resolved viral skin infections. Because of their localization in the epidermal compartment of the skin, T-RM may contribute to tissue pathology during psoriasis. In this study, we investigated whether resolved psoriasis lesions contain T-RM cells with the ability to maintain and potentially drive recurrent disease. Three common and effective therapies, narrowband-UVB treatment and long-term biologic treatment systemically inhibiting TNF-alpha or IL-12/23 signaling were studied. Epidermal T cells were highly activated in psoriasis and a high proportion of CD8 T cells expressed T-RM markers. In resolved psoriasis, a population of cutaneous lymphocyte-associated Ag, CCR6, CD103, and IL-23R expressing epidermal CD8 T cells was highly enriched. Epidermal CD8 T cells expressing the T-RM marker CD103 responded to ex vivo stimulation with IL-17A production and epidermal CD4 T cells responded with IL-22 production after as long as 6 y of TNF-alpha inhibition. Our data suggest that epidermal T-RM cells are retained in resolved psoriasis and that these cells are capable of producing cytokines with a critical role in psoriasis pathogenesis. We provide a potential mechanism for a site-specific T cell-driven disease memory in psoriasis.

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