An Interleukin-25-Mediated Autoregulatory Circuit in Keratinocytes Plays a Pivotal Role in Psoriatic Skin Inflammation

  • Miao Xu
  • , Huiping Lu
  • , Young Hee Lee
  • , Yelin Wu
  • , Kewei Liu
  • , Yuling Shi
  • , Haoran An
  • , Jingren Zhang
  • , Xiaohu Wang
  • , Yuping Lai
  • , Chen Dong*
  • *Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

113 Scopus citations

Abstract

Psoriasis is a chronic autoinflammatory skin disease. Although interleukin-17, derived from lymphocytes, has been shown to be critical in psoriasis, the initiation and maintenance of chronic skin inflammation has not been well understood. IL-25 (also called IL-17E), another IL-17 family cytokine, is well known to regulate allergic responses and type 2 immunity. Here we have shown that IL-25, also highly expressed in the lesional skin of psoriasis patients, was regulated by IL-17 in murine skin of a imiquimod (IMQ)-induced psoriasis model. IL-25 injection induced skin inflammation, whereas germline or keratinocyte-specific deletion of IL-25 caused resistance to IMQ-induced psoriasis. Via IL-17RB expression in keratinocytes, IL-25 stimulated the proliferation of keratinocytes and induced the production of inflammatory cytokines and chemokines, via activation of the STAT3 transcription factor. Thus, our data demonstrate that an IL-17-induced autoregulatory circuit in keratinocytes is mediated by IL-25 and suggest that this circuit could be targeted in the treatment of psoriasis patients. The inflammatory mechanism of psoriasis remains incompletely understood. In this issue, Xu et al. identified IL-25 as a key pathogenic factor regulating the proliferation of keratinocytes and psoriasis development in an autocrine expression manner.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)787-798.e4
JournalImmunity
Volume48
Issue number4
DOIs
StatePublished - 17 Apr 2018

Keywords

  • IL-25
  • cytokines
  • keratinocytes
  • psoriasis

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