A role for T cell-derived interleukin 22 in psoriatic skin inflammation

Clinical and Experimental Immunology, 150(3):407-15

BONIFACE K., MOREL F., PEDRETTI N., GARCIA M., GUIGNOUARD E., GUILLET G., DAGREGORIO G., YSSEL H., BERNARD FX., DELWAIL A., NAU F. and LECRON JC. (2007)

Université de Poitiers, CHU de Poitiers, UPRES-EA 3806, Laboratoire Cytokines et Inflammation, Poitiers, France.
Bioalternatives, Gençay, France.
Service de Dermatologie, CHU de Poitiers, France.
Service de Chirurgie Plastique, CHU de Poitiers, France.
Inserm U844, Université de Montpellier, CHU St Eloi, Montpellier, France.

Abstract

Interleukin 22 (IL-22) is a T cell-derived cytokine that has been reported recently to induce cutaneous inflammation in an experimental murine model of psoriasis, and to induce in vitro an inflammatory-like phenotype.
In the present study, we assessed the presence of IL-22 and the IL-22 receptor 1 (IL-22R1) in skin lesions, skin-derived T cells, as well as IL-22 levels in sera from patients with psoriasis. IL-22R1 and IL-10R2 transcripts are expressed at a similar level in psoriatic and healthy skin. In contrast, IL-22 mRNA expression was up-regulated in psoriatic skin lesions compared to normal skin, whereas IL-22 mRNA levels in peripheral blood mononuclear cells from psoriatic patients and normal subjects were similar. Circulating IL-22 levels were significantly higher in psoriatic patients than in normal subjects. T cells isolated from psoriatic skin produced higher levels of IL-22 in comparison to peripheral T cells isolated from the same patients. IL-10 was expressed at similar levels in skin biopsies and peripheral blood mononuclear cells of psoriatic patients and normal subjects.
Finally, we show here that supernatants of lesional psoriatic skin-infiltrating T cells induce an inflammatory response by normal human epidermal keratinocytes, resembling that observed in psoriatic lesions. Taken together, the results reported in this study indicate that interleukin 22 is a cytokine produced by skin-infiltrating lymphocytes that is potentially involved in initiation and/or maintenance of the pathogenesis of psoriasis.

© 2007 British Society for Immunology.

KEYWORDS: Cytokines; Inflammation; Psoriasis; Skin disease; T cells; interleukin 22

Check out Bioalternatives’ updates and experience new testing ideas

  • Bioassays, models and services
  • Posts and publications
  • Events
  • The legal basis for the processing is consent. Your e-mail address will only be communicated to the following recipients: the departments concerned and authorised by QIMA LIFE SCIENCE. This data is kept for as long as you are registered to the newsletter.

    You can access your data, rectify it, request its deletion or exercise your right to limit the processing of your data, withdraw your consent to the processing of your data at any time, oppose the processing of your data and you have a right to the portability of your data.

    Visit cnil.fr for more information on your rights.
    You can exercise all your rights using the following linkGestion des droits or by writing to dpo-qima@agencergpd.eu. If you feel, after contacting us, that your "Informatique et Libertés" rights are not being respected, you can submit a complaint to the CNIL.

  • The information collected on this form is recorded in a file used by QIMA Life Sciences to send you its newsletter.