4.2 Article

Tofacitinib downregulates antiviral immune defence in keratinocytes and reduces T cell activation

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ARTHRITIS RESEARCH & THERAPY
卷 23, 期 1, 页码 -

出版社

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s13075-021-02509-8

关键词

Janus kinase inhibitor; Antiviral immunity; Keratinocyte; T cell

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  1. Pfizer Pharma Germany (Forschungsforderung)

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In vitro, tofacitinib significantly reduces the gene expression of antiviral peptides in keratinocytes and synoviocytes, as well as decreasing T cell activation after stimulation with bacterial or viral proteins. This suggests that tofacitinib may impact antiviral immunity, leading to adverse events like herpes zoster in patients. However, antimicrobial immunity does not appear to be affected by JAK inhibition.
Background: Tofacitinib is a novel Janus kinase (JAK) inhibitor approved for the treatment of rheumatoid arthritis, psoriatic arthritis, and ulcerative colitis. In clinical trials, the most common adverse events observed were nasopharyngitis, upper respiratory tract infections, and zoster. JAKs are found downstream of the type II cytokine receptor family used by a number of T(H)17 cell-associated cytokines for signal transduction. These cytokines lead to the secretion of antiviral and antimicrobial peptides (AMPs) by keratinocytes or synoviocytes. Blocking the JAK pathway might result in a diminished secretion of antimicrobial and antiviral peptides causing higher susceptibility to infections in patients treated with JAK inhibitors. Methods: We treated primary human keratinocytes and synoviocytes with tofacitinib and subsequently added various cytokines and bacterial surface proteins before evaluation of the response via RT-qPCR. CD69 expression on tofacitinib-treated PBMCs was investigated via flow cytometry. Results: We found a markedly reduced gene expression of all tested antiviral peptides such as MX1 or ISG15 in keratinocytes and synoviocytes in the presence of tofacitinib in vitro. Additionally, we found that JAK inhibition reduced activation of T cells after stimulation with bacterial LPS or viral VZV gE. Conclusions: The antiviral immunity is strongly inhibited in the presence of tofacitinib in vitro, while the antimicrobial immunity does not seem to be affected. In T cells, the overall activation process seems to be influenced by tofacitinib. These findings suggest that tofacitinib has an impact on antiviral immunity such as patients treated with tofacitinib often show adverse events like herpes zoster.

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