CCR6 is required for IL-23-induced psoriasis-like inflammation in mice

214Citations
Citations of this article
171Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.
Get full text

Abstract

Psoriasis is a common immune-mediated chronic inflammatory skin disorder, but the mechanisms of pathogenesis are still poorly understood. IL-23 is expressed in psoriatic skin, and IL-23 injection produces IL-22-dependent psoriasiform changes in mouse skin. Th17 cells produce IL-22 and display CCR6, the CCL20 receptor; CCR6+ T cells and CCL20 are abundant in psoriatic skin. We investigated a possible role for CCR6 in recruiting Th17 cells and producing psoriasiform pathology by injecting IL-23 into the skin of WT and Ccr6 -/- mice. Unlike for WT mice, IL-23-injected ears of Ccr6 -/- mice showed neither substantial epidermal/dermal changes nor increased Il22 mRNA expression. However, injection of IL-22 yielded equivalent psoriasiform changes in WT and Ccr6-/- mice. Surprisingly, IL-23-injected ears of WT and Ccr6-/- mice contained similar numbers of Th cells able to make IL-17A and/or IL-22. Furthermore, in ears of Rag1 -/- mice, IL-23 initially induced skin changes and levels of Il22 mRNA that were indistinguishable from WT mice, revealing at least one non-T cell source for IL-22. We conclude that CCR6 is essential in a model of IL-23-induced, IL-22-mediated dermatitis, which develops in sequential T cell-independent and T cell-dependent phases. These findings reveal an expanded role for CCR6 in IL-23-related responses and identify CCR6 as a potential therapeutic target in psoriasis.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Hedrick, M. N., Lonsdorf, A. S., Shirakawa, A. K., Lee, C. C. R., Liao, F., Singh, S. P., … Farber, J. M. (2009). CCR6 is required for IL-23-induced psoriasis-like inflammation in mice. Journal of Clinical Investigation, 119(8), 2317–2329. https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI37378

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free