TY - JOUR
T1 - Dermatitis due to epiregulin deficiency and a critical role of epiregulin in immune-related responses of keratinocyte and macrophage
AU - Shirasawa, Senji
AU - Sugiyama, Shigeru
AU - Baba, Iwai
AU - Inokuchi, Junichi
AU - Sekine, Sayaka
AU - Ogino, Keiko
AU - Kawamura, Yuki
AU - Dohi, Taeko
AU - Fujimoto, Manabu
AU - Sasazuki, Takehiko
PY - 2004/9/21
Y1 - 2004/9/21
N2 - Epidermal growth factor (EGF) family members, including epiregulin (EP), play a fundamental role in epithelial tissues; however, their roles in immune responses and the physiological role of EP remain to be elucidated. The skin has a versatile system of immune surveillance. Biologically active IL-1α is released to extracellular space upon damage from keratinocytes and is a major player in skin inflammation. Here, we show that EP is expressed not only in keratinocytes but also in tissue-resident macrophages, and that EP-deficient (EP-/-) mice develop chronic dermatitis. Wound healing in the skin in EP-/- mice was not impaired in vivo, nor was the growth rate of keratinocytes from EP-/- mice different from that of WT mice in vitro. Of interest is that in WT keratinocytes, both IL-1α and the secreted form of EP induced down-regulation of IL-18 mRNA expression, which overexpression in the epidermis was reported to induce skin inflammation in mice, whereas the down-regulation of IL-18 induced by IL-1α was impaired in EP-/- keratinocytes. Although bone marrow transfer experiments indicated that EP deficiency in non-bone-marrow-derived cells is essential for the development of dermatitis, production of proinflammatory cytokines by EP-/- macrophages in response to Toll-like receptor agonists was much lower, compared with WT macrophages, whose dysfunction in EP-/- macrophages was not compensated by the addition of the secreted form of EP. These findings, taken together, suggested that EP plays a critical role in immune/inflammatory-related responses of keratinocytes and macrophages at the barrier from the outside milieu and that the secreted and membrane-bound forms of EP have distinct functions.
AB - Epidermal growth factor (EGF) family members, including epiregulin (EP), play a fundamental role in epithelial tissues; however, their roles in immune responses and the physiological role of EP remain to be elucidated. The skin has a versatile system of immune surveillance. Biologically active IL-1α is released to extracellular space upon damage from keratinocytes and is a major player in skin inflammation. Here, we show that EP is expressed not only in keratinocytes but also in tissue-resident macrophages, and that EP-deficient (EP-/-) mice develop chronic dermatitis. Wound healing in the skin in EP-/- mice was not impaired in vivo, nor was the growth rate of keratinocytes from EP-/- mice different from that of WT mice in vitro. Of interest is that in WT keratinocytes, both IL-1α and the secreted form of EP induced down-regulation of IL-18 mRNA expression, which overexpression in the epidermis was reported to induce skin inflammation in mice, whereas the down-regulation of IL-18 induced by IL-1α was impaired in EP-/- keratinocytes. Although bone marrow transfer experiments indicated that EP deficiency in non-bone-marrow-derived cells is essential for the development of dermatitis, production of proinflammatory cytokines by EP-/- macrophages in response to Toll-like receptor agonists was much lower, compared with WT macrophages, whose dysfunction in EP-/- macrophages was not compensated by the addition of the secreted form of EP. These findings, taken together, suggested that EP plays a critical role in immune/inflammatory-related responses of keratinocytes and macrophages at the barrier from the outside milieu and that the secreted and membrane-bound forms of EP have distinct functions.
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U2 - 10.1073/pnas.0404217101
DO - 10.1073/pnas.0404217101
M3 - Article
C2 - 15365177
AN - SCOPUS:4644290320
SN - 0027-8424
VL - 101
SP - 13921
EP - 13926
JO - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
JF - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
IS - 38
ER -