Mechanisms of Inflammation in Neutrophil-Mediated Skin Diseases

Angelo Valerio Marzano(Fondazione IRCCS Ca' Granda Ospedale Maggiore Policlinico), Alex G. Ortega‐Loayza(Oregon Health & Science University), Michael S. Heath(Oregon Health & Science University), Daniel Morse(Oregon Health & Science University), Giovanni Genovese(Fondazione IRCCS Ca' Granda Ospedale Maggiore Policlinico), Massimo Cugno(University of Milan)
Frontiers in Immunology
May 8, 2019
Cited by 124Open Access
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Abstract

Neutrophil-mediated skin diseases, originally named neutrophilic dermatoses (NDs), are a group of conditions due to an altered neutrophil recruitment and activation, characterized by polymorphic cutaneous manifestations with possible internal organ involvement. Although a number of diseases are included in this setting, the two prototypic forms are pyoderma gangrenosum (PG) and Sweet's syndrome (SS) which usually present with skin ulcers and plaque-type lesions, respectively. They have central features significantly overlapping with autoinflammatory conditions which manifest as repeated episodes of tissue inflammation. However, in contrast to appropriate inflammatory responses to insults or to autoimmune disease, there is an absence of identifiable pathogens, autoantibodies, or autoreactive lymphocytes. The recognition of monogenic autoinflammatory diseases which can present with NDs has led to study several genes involved in autoinflammation in NDs. Based on discovering of a number of mutations involving different autoinflammatory genes, neutrophil-mediated skin diseases are nowadays regarded as a spectrum of polygenic autoinflammatory conditions. Although disease mechanisms have not yet been completely elucidated, NDs are recognized as diseases involving dysfunctional cellular signaling mediated by pathways mainly related to inflammasome and IL-1 with the contributory role of IL-17 and other effector molecules. The precise elucidation of the above-mentioned pathologic mechanisms may pave the way to tailored treatments for patients with different neutrophil-mediated skin diseases.


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