Pfizer (United States)
Publishes on T-cell and B-cell Immunology, Immune Cell Function and Interaction, Psoriasis: Treatment and Pathogenesis. 62 papers and 6k citations.
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Psoriasis is a chronic skin disease resulting from the dysregulated interplay between keratinocytes and infiltrating immune cells. We report on a psoriasis-like disease model, which is induced by the transfer of CD4(+)CD45RB(hi)CD25(-) cells to pathogen-free scid/scid mice. Psoriasis-like lesions had elevated levels of antimicrobial peptide and proinflammatory cytokine mRNA. Also, similar to psoriasis, disease progression in this model was dependent on the p40 common to IL-12 and IL-23. To investigate the role of IL-22, a Th17 cytokine, in disease progression, mice were treated with IL-22-neutralizing antibodies. Neutralization of IL-22 prevented the development of disease, reducing acanthosis (thickening of the skin), inflammatory infiltrates, and expression of Th17 cytokines. Direct administration of IL-22 into the skin of normal mice induced both antimicrobial peptide and proinflammatory cytokine gene expression. Our data suggest that IL-22, which acts on keratinocytes and other nonhematopoietic cells, is required for development of the autoreactive Th17 cell-dependent disease in this model of skin inflammation. We propose that IL-22 antagonism might be a promising therapy for the treatment of human psoriasis.
Nonactivated CD4+CD25+ regulatory T cells constitutively express glucocorticoid-induced TNFR family-related receptor (GITR), a TNFR family member whose engagement was presumed to abrogate regulatory T cell-mediated suppression. Using GITR-/- mice, we report that GITR engagement on CD25-, not CD25+ T cells abrogates T cell-mediated suppression. Mouse APCs constitutively express GITR ligand (GITR-L), which is down-regulated following TLR signaling in vivo. Although GITR-/-CD25- T cells were capable of mounting proliferative responses, they were incapable of proliferation in the presence of physiological numbers of CD25+ T cells. Thus, GITR-L provides an important signal for CD25- T cells, rendering them resistant to CD25+ -mediated regulation at the initiation of the immune response. The down-regulation of GITR-L by inflammatory stimuli may enhance the susceptibility of effector T cells to suppressor activity during the course of an infectious insult.