The importance of T helper 17 (Th17) cells in inflammation and autoimmunity is now being appreciated. We analyzed psoriasis skin lesions and peripheral blood for the presence of IL-17-producing T cells. We localized Th17 cells predominantly to the dermis of psoriasis skin lesions, confirmed that IL-17 mRNA increased with disease activity, and demonstrated that IL-17 mRNA expression normalized with cyclosporine therapy. IL-22 mRNA expression mirrored IL-17 and both were downregulated in parallel with keratin 16. Th17 cells are a discrete population, separate from Th1 cells (which are also in psoriasis lesions), and Th2 cells. Our findings suggest that psoriasis is a mixed Th1 and Th17 inflammatory environment. Th17 cells may be proximal regulators of psoriatic skin inflammation, and warrant further attention as therapeutic targets.
Background-Psoriasis and atopic dermatitis (AD) are common inflammatory skin diseases. Upregulated Th17/IL-23 pathway was demonstrated in psoriasis. Although potential involvement of Th17 T-cells in AD was suggested during acute disease, the role of these cells in chronic AD remains unclear.
We find that CD11c ؉ cells with many markers of dendritic cells (DCs) are a major cell type in the skin lesions of psoriasis. These CD11c ؉ cells, which are evident in both epidermis and dermis, are the sites for the expression of two mediators of inflammation, inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS) and TNF-␣ in diseased skin. These cells express HLA-DR, CD40, and CD86, lack the Langerin and CD14 markers of Langerhans cells and monocytes, respectively, and to a significant extent express the DC maturation markers DC-LAMP and CD83. Treatment of psoriasis with efalizumab (antiCD11a, Raptiva) strongly reduces infiltration by these DCs in patients responding to this agent. Disease activity after therapy was more related to DC infiltrates and iNOS mRNA levels than T cell infiltrates, and CD11c ؉ cells responded more quickly to therapy than epidermal keratinocytes. Our results suggest that a type of DC, which resembles murine ''Tip-DCs'' that can accumulate during infection, has proinflammatory effects in psoriasis through nitric oxide and TNF-␣ production, and can be an important target for suppressive therapies.autoimmune disease ͉ CD11c ͉ Tip-DC
Psoriasis vulgaris is a skin disease potentially mediated by pro-inflammatory cytokines produced by type 1 lesional T cells. The capability of individual T cells to produce these cytokines in lesional skin is not known. In this study we measured the ability of lesional and peripheral blood T cells to produce intracellular interferon-gamma, tumor necrosis factor-alpha, interleukin-2, interleukin-4, and interleukin-10 proteins as detected by flow cytometric analysis. Cytokine synthesis was induced by activation with ionomycin/phorbol myristate acetate (in the presence of Brefeldin A, which inhibits the exocytosis of these cytokines). After stimulation, we found relatively high percentages of epidermal CD8 and CD4 T cells capable of producing interferon-gamma, tumor necrosis factor-alpha, and interleukin-2, whereas few T cells, < 11%, expressed interleukin-4 or interleukin-10. Hence both CD8+ and CD4+ T cells are capable of type 1 effector functions (TC1 and TH1, respectively). This activation scheme was repeated on peripheral blood T cells from psoriatic patients versus healthy controls, where we also found a type 1 bias. In order to evaluate quantitatively the type 1 cytokine bias, we compared the frequency of type 2 interleukin-4 producing versus type 1 interferon-gamma producing T cells in our assay and found a shift towards type 1 producing cells. This shift reveals a type 1 differentiation bias in both lesional areas and in the peripheral blood, which may indicate an imbalance within the T cell population, which is contributing to the chronic or sustained immunologic activation of T cells found in this disease.
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