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WFDC12-overexpressing contributes to the development of atopic dermatitis via accelerating ALOX12/15 metabolism and PAF accumulation

Authors :
Guolin Li
Linna Gu
Fulei Zhao
Yawen Hu
Xiaoyan Wang
Fanlian Zeng
Jiadong Yu
Chengcheng Yue
Pei Zhou
Ya Li
Yuting Feng
Jing Hu
Nongyu Huang
Wenling Wu
Kaijun Cui
Wei Li
Jiong Li
Source :
Cell Death & Disease. 14
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2023.

Abstract

Atopic dermatitis (AD) is a chronic inflammatory skin disease characterized by eczema-like skin lesions, dry skin, severe itching, and recurrent recurrence. The whey acidic protein four-disulfide core domain gene WFDC12 is highly expressed in skin tissue and up-regulated in the skin lesions of AD patients, but its role and relevant mechanism in AD pathogenesis have not been studied yet. In this study, we found that the expression of WFDC12 was closely related to clinical symptoms of AD and the severity of AD-like lesions induced by DNFB in transgenic mice. WFDC12-overexpressing in the epidermis might promote the migration of skin-presenting cells to lymph nodes and increase Th cell infiltration. Meanwhile, the number and ratio of immune cells and mRNA levels of cytokines were significantly upregulated in transgenic mice. In addition, we found that ALOX12/15 gene expression was upregulated in the arachidonic acid metabolism pathway, and the corresponding metabolite accumulation was increased. The activity of epidermal serine hydrolase decreased and the accumulation of platelet-activating factor (PAF) increased in the epidermis of transgenic mice. Collectively, our data demonstrate that WFDC12 may contribute to the exacerbation of AD-like symptoms in DNFB-induced mouse model by enhancing arachidonic acid metabolism and PAF accumulation and that WFDC12 may be a potential therapeutic target for human atopic dermatitis.

Details

ISSN :
20414889
Volume :
14
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Cell Death & Disease
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........663918a6834f94091a0606be5e3aba79