Immune Modulation of Monocytes Dampens the IL-17+ γδ T Cell Response and Associated Psoriasis Pathology in Mice
[摘要] Psoriasis is a chronic inflammatory autoimmune skin condition that affects millions of people worldwide. It is driven by IL-17-producing CD4 and gamma delta T cells and targeted by current anti-IL-17 or anti-IL-23 mAb therapies. These treatments are expensive, increase the risk of opportunistic infections, and do not specifically target the inflammatory cascade. Other cells, including inflammatory monocytes, have been shown to migrate to psoriatic plaques in both human disease and the imiquimod-induced mouse model and could thus constitute potential alternative therapeutic targets. In the mouse, immune modifying particles (IMPs) specifically target Ly6Chi inflammatory monocytes migrating to the site of inflammation, sequestering them in the spleen. In this project, we determined whether IMPs could mitigate the development of imiquimod-induced psoriasis in mice. IMP treatment significantly reduced imiquimod-induced psoriasis severity, decreasing dermal infiltration of Ly6Chi monocytes as well as early-stage monocyte-derived dermal macrophages. This was associated with reduced levels of hallmark cytokines IL-23 and IL-1 beta as well as associated IL-17-producing gamma delta T cells. Our work highlights the crucial importance of inflammatory monocytes in the development of this disease as well as a therapeutic potential for IMP in psoriasis.
[发布日期] 2020-12-01 [发布机构]
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