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Tristetraprolin expression by keratinocytes controls local and systemic inflammation
Mathieu Andrianne, Assiya Assabban, Caroline La, Denis Mogilenko, Delphine Staumont Salle, Sébastien Fleury, Gilles Doumont, Gaëtan Van Simaeys, Sergei A. Nedospasov, Perry J. Blackshear, David Dombrowicz, Stanislas Goriely, Laurye Van Maele
Mathieu Andrianne, Assiya Assabban, Caroline La, Denis Mogilenko, Delphine Staumont Salle, Sébastien Fleury, Gilles Doumont, Gaëtan Van Simaeys, Sergei A. Nedospasov, Perry J. Blackshear, David Dombrowicz, Stanislas Goriely, Laurye Van Maele
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Research Article Dermatology Inflammation

Tristetraprolin expression by keratinocytes controls local and systemic inflammation

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Abstract

Tristetraprolin (TTP, encoded by the Zfp36 gene) regulates the mRNA stability of several important cytokines. Due to the critical role of this RNA-binding protein in the control of inflammation, TTP deficiency leads to the spontaneous development of a complex inflammatory syndrome. So far, this phenotype has been largely attributed to dysregulated production of TNF and IL‑23 by myeloid cells, such as macrophages or DCs. Here, we generated mice with conditional deletion of TTP in keratinocytes (Zfp36fl/flK14-Cre mice, referred to herein as Zfp36ΔEP mice). Unlike DC-restricted (CD11c-Cre) or myeloid cell–restricted (LysM-Cre) TTP ablation, these mice developed exacerbated inflammation in the imiquimod-induced psoriasis model. Furthermore, Zfp36ΔEP mice progressively developed a spontaneous pathology with systemic inflammation, psoriatic-like skin lesions, and dactylitis. Finally, we provide evidence that keratinocyte-derived TNF production drives these different pathological features. In summary, these findings expand current views on the initiation of psoriasis and related arthritis by revealing the keratinocyte-intrinsic role of TTP.

Authors

Mathieu Andrianne, Assiya Assabban, Caroline La, Denis Mogilenko, Delphine Staumont Salle, Sébastien Fleury, Gilles Doumont, Gaëtan Van Simaeys, Sergei A. Nedospasov, Perry J. Blackshear, David Dombrowicz, Stanislas Goriely, Laurye Van Maele

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Figure 4

Mice with Zfp36 deficiency in keratinocytes represent a more specific model of human psoriasis.

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Mice with Zfp36 deficiency in keratinocytes represent a more specific mo...
(A) Volcano plot showing log2 fold changes versus log10 P values. As shown from the top of A to the bottom, 6,004 transcripts were significantly upregulated (red) and 6,900 transcripts were significantly downregulated (blue) among all transcripts (gray) in laser-microdissected epidermis from skin of patients with psoriasis compared with healthy epidermis from skin from subjects with no diagnosed skin diseases. Distribution of 2,675 mouse orthologs corresponding to the 6,004 human transcripts increased in psoriatic epidermis (red, the positive psoriasis signature) among all genes (gray) in skin from Zfp36ΔEP mice compared with Zfp36fl/fl mice, both treated by imiquimod. P values for differential expression (upregulation or downregulation) of the gene set (red) are shown. The same analysis for 2,700 mouse orthologs corresponding to the 6,900 human transcripts decreased in psoriatic epidermis (blue, the negative psoriasis signature). (B) Heatmap of expression levels of genes of the positive and negative psoriasis signature, significantly (q < 0.05) increased or decreased, respectively, in skin from Zfp36ΔEP mice compared with Zfp36fl/fl mice, both treated by imiquimod. Each column corresponds to a separate mouse. (C) Expression of ZFP36 in microdissected epidermis from healthy (n = 5) and psoriatic individuals (lesional skin) (n = 10) was analyzed by microarrays. Results are given as mean ± SEM. Statistical significance (*P < 0.05) was assessed by 2-tailed Mann-Whitney test compared with healthy group.

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