1. Antiviral gene expression in psoriasis.
- Author
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Raposo RA, Gupta R, Abdel-Mohsen M, Dimon M, Debbaneh M, Jiang W, York VA, Leadabrand KS, Brown G, Malakouti M, Arron S, Kuebler PJ, Wu JJ, Pillai SK, Nixon DF, and Liao W
- Subjects
- Adult, CD4-Positive T-Lymphocytes virology, Case-Control Studies, Cells, Cultured, Cytokines genetics, Dermatitis, Atopic immunology, Gene Expression Profiling, HIV Infections genetics, Humans, Interferon Regulatory Factor-7 genetics, Minor Histocompatibility Antigens, Myxovirus Resistance Proteins genetics, Oligonucleotide Array Sequence Analysis, Oxidoreductases Acting on CH-CH Group Donors, Proteins genetics, Psoriasis virology, RNA blood, Repressor Proteins genetics, Skin metabolism, Tripartite Motif Proteins, Ubiquitins genetics, Dermatitis, Atopic genetics, Gene Expression, Psoriasis genetics, Psoriasis immunology, RNA metabolism, Skin immunology
- Abstract
Background: Psoriasis patients have relatively infrequent cutaneous viral infections compared to atopic dermatitis patients. Increased expression of four antiviral proteins (MX1, BST2, ISG15 and OAS2) has been reported in psoriatic skin and genetic studies of psoriasis have identified susceptibility genes in antiviral pathways., Objective: To determine if psoriasis is associated with pervasive expression of antiviral genes in skin and blood., Methods: We performed RNA sequencing on skin samples of 18 subjects with chronic plaque psoriasis and 16 healthy controls. We examined the expression of a predefined set of 42 antiviral genes, each of which has been shown in previous studies to inhibit viral replication. In parallel, we examined antiviral gene expression in atopic dermatitis, non-lesional psoriatic skin and psoriatic blood. We performed HIV-1 infectivity assays in CD4+ peripheral blood T cells from psoriatic and healthy individuals., Results: We observed significant overexpression of 16 antiviral genes in lesional psoriatic skin, with a greater than two-fold increase in ISG15, RSAD2, IRF7, MX2 and TRIM22 (P < 1E-07). None of these genes was overexpressed in atopic dermatitis skin (P < 0.0001) or non-lesional psoriatic skin. In contrast to the skin compartment, no differences in antiviral gene expression were detected in the peripheral blood of psoriasis cases compared to healthy controls. CD4+ T cells from both psoriatic and healthy patients supported HIV-1 infection at a similar rate., Conclusion: Our findings highlight psoriasis as an inflammatory disease with cutaneous but not systemic immune activation against viral pathogens., (© 2015 European Academy of Dermatology and Venereology.)
- Published
- 2015
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