Epicutaneous Staphylococcus aureus induces IL-36 to enhance IgE production and ensuing allergic disease.

Journal: The Journal Of Clinical Investigation
Published:
Abstract

IgE induced by type 2 immune responses in atopic dermatitis is implicated in the progression of atopic dermatitis to other allergic diseases, including food allergies, allergic rhinitis, and asthma. However, the keratinocyte-derived signals that promote IgE and ensuing allergic diseases remain unclear. Herein, in a mouse model of atopic dermatitis-like skin inflammation induced by epicutaneous Staphylococcus aureus exposure, keratinocyte release of IL‑36α along with IL-4 triggered B cell IgE class-switching, plasma cell differentiation, and increased serum IgE levels-all of which were abrogated in IL-36R-deficient mice or anti-IL‑36R-blocking antibody-treated mice. Moreover, skin allergen sensitization during S. aureus epicutaneous exposure-induced IL-36 responses was required for the development of allergen-specific lung inflammation. In translating these findings, elevated IL‑36 cytokines in human atopic dermatitis skin and in IL‑36 receptor antagonist-deficiency patients coincided with increased serum IgE levels. Collectively, keratinocyte-initiated IL‑36 responses represent a key mechanism and potential therapeutic target against allergic diseases.

Authors
Garrett Patrick, Haiyun Liu, Martin Alphonse, Dustin Dikeman, Christine Youn, Jack Otterson, Yu Wang, Advaitaa Ravipati, Momina Mazhar, George Denny, Roger Ortines, Emily Zhang, Robert Miller, Carly Dillen, Qi Liu, Sabrina Nolan, Kristine Nguyen, Leeann Marcello, Danh Do, Eric Wier, Yan Zhang, Gary Caviness, Alexander Klimowicz, Diane Mierz, Jay Fine, Guangping Sun, Raphaela Goldbach Mansky, Alina Marusina, Alexander Merleev, Emanual Maverakis, Luis Garza, Joshua Milner, Peisong Gao, Meera Ramanujam, Ernest Raymond, Nathan Archer, Lloyd Miller
Relevant Conditions

Atopic Dermatitis