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      Innate immune cell-produced IL-17 sustains inflammation in bullous pemphigoid

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          Abstract

          Bullous pemphigoid (BP) is an autoimmune skin disease characterized by the binding of autoantibodies to components of the hemidesmosome structure resulting in an inflammatory response and subepidermal blister formation. To investigate the role of immune orientation in the inflammatory processes associated to disease progression, blister fluid, serum and biopsy specimens were collected from thirty one consecutive BP patients. Blister fluids displayed high level of IL-6, IL-17, IL-22, IL-23, whereas TGF-β was increased in BP sera. However neither immunocytochemistry on a trans-differentiation model of IL-17-producing PBMCs nor immunohistochemistry on BP biopsy specimens could demonstrate the presence of T h17 lymphocytes. Instead innate immune cells, especially neutrophils, produced IL-17 at the skin lesional site. Of note, superpotent topical corticosteroid application quickly and dramatically reduced both IL-17 expression and clinical signs of BP. Consistently, IL-17 upregulated MMP-9 and neutrophil elastase expression, two proteases involved in blister formation, thereof further demonstrating its role in the progress of BP. Finally IL-17-induced matrix degradation originated from neutrophil activation, initiated the formation of an amplification loop of the inflammatory response that could represent the underlying phenomenon leading to the maintenance and even disease extent. Thus, our results could open new therapeutic strategies for BP patients.

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          Most cited references45

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          A distinct lineage of CD4 T cells regulates tissue inflammation by producing interleukin 17.

          Interleukin 17 (IL-17) has been linked to autoimmune diseases, although its regulation and function have remained unclear. Here we have evaluated in vitro and in vivo the requirements for the differentiation of naive CD4 T cells into effector T helper cells that produce IL-17. This process required the costimulatory molecules CD28 and ICOS but was independent of the cytokines and transcription factors required for T helper type 1 or type 2 differentiation. Furthermore, both IL-4 and interferon-gamma negatively regulated T helper cell production of IL-17 in the effector phase. In vivo, antibody to IL-17 inhibited chemokine expression in the brain during experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis, whereas overexpression of IL-17 in lung epithelium caused chemokine production and leukocyte infiltration. Thus, IL-17 expression characterizes a unique T helper lineage that regulates tissue inflammation.
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            IL-17 family cytokines and the expanding diversity of effector T cell lineages.

            Since its conception two decades ago, the Th1-Th2 paradigm has provided a framework for understanding T cell biology and the interplay of innate and adaptive immunity. Naive T cells differentiate into effector T cells with enhanced functional potential for orchestrating pathogen clearance largely under the guidance of cytokines produced by cells of the innate immune system that have been activated by recognition of those pathogens. This secondary education of post-thymic T cells provides a mechanism for appropriately matching adaptive immunity to frontline cues of the innate immune system. Owing in part to the rapid identification of novel cytokines of the IL-17 and IL-12 families using database searches, the factors that specify differentiation of a new effector T cell lineage-Th17-have now been identified, providing a new arm of adaptive immunity and presenting a unifying model that can explain many heretofore confusing aspects of immune regulation, immune pathogenesis, and host defense.
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              The differentiation of human T(H)-17 cells requires transforming growth factor-beta and induction of the nuclear receptor RORgammat.

              T(H)-17 cells are interleukin 17 (IL-17)-secreting CD4+ T helper cells involved in autoimmune disease and mucosal immunity. In naive CD4+ T cells from mice, IL-17 is expressed in response to a combination of IL-6 or IL-21 and transforming growth factor-beta (TGF-beta) and requires induction of the nuclear receptor RORgammat. It has been suggested that the differentiation of human T(H)-17 cells is independent of TGF-beta and thus differs fundamentally from that in mice. We show here that TGF-beta, IL-1beta and IL-6, IL-21 or IL-23 in serum-free conditions were necessary and sufficient to induce IL-17 expression in naive human CD4+ T cells from cord blood. TGF-beta upregulated RORgammat expression but simultaneously inhibited its ability to induce IL-17 expression. Inflammatory cytokines relieved this inhibition and increased RORgammat-directed IL-17 expression. Other gene products detected in T(H)-17 cells after RORgammat induction included the chemokine receptor CCR6, the IL-23 receptor, IL-17F and IL-26. Our studies identify RORgammat as having a central function in the differentiation of human T(H)-17 cells from naive CD4+ T cells and suggest that similar cytokine pathways are involved in this process in mice and humans.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                0426720
                4839
                J Invest Dermatol
                J. Invest. Dermatol.
                The Journal of investigative dermatology
                0022-202X
                1523-1747
                5 July 2014
                19 July 2014
                December 2014
                01 June 2015
                : 134
                : 12
                : 2908-2917
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Laboratory of Dermatology, EA7319 Derm-I-C, University of Reims-Champagne-Ardenne, Reims, 51 rue Cognacq Jay, 51095 REIMS Cedex, France
                [2 ]Department of Dermatology, University Hospital, University of Reims-Champagne-Ardenne, Reims, avenue du Général Koenig, 51092 REIMS Cedex, France
                [3 ]Laboratory of Biochemistry, UMR CNRS 7369, University of Reims-Champagne-Ardenne, Reims 51 rue Cognacq Jay, 51095 REIMS Cedex, France
                [4 ]Laboratory Pol Bouin, Hospital Maison Blanche, University Hospital, 45, rue Cognac-Jay, 51092 REIMS Cedex, France
                [5 ]Division of Pulmonary, Allergy, and Critical Care Medicine, Department of Medicine, Lung Health Center, University of Alabama at Birmingham, 1918 University Boulevard, Birmingham, Alabama 35294, USA
                Author notes
                [* ] Corresponding author: Antonicelli Frank, Laboratory of Dermatology, EA-7319 Derm-I-C, University of Reims-Champagne-Ardenne, Reims, 51 rue Cognacq Jay, 51095 REIMS Cedex, France, frank.antonicelli@ 123456univ-reims.fr
                [†]

                FA and PB have equally contributed

                Article
                NIHMS605881
                10.1038/jid.2014.263
                4227922
                24945093
                082244ac-634b-4f05-b564-80211460509b
                History
                Categories
                Article

                Dermatology
                Dermatology

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