Scientific article
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English

Human neutrophils drive skin autoinflammation by releasing interleukin (IL)-26

Published inThe journal of experimental medicine, vol. 221, no. 5, e20231464
Publication date2024-05-06
First online date2024-03-06
Abstract

Autoinflammation is a sterile inflammatory process resulting from increased neutrophil infiltration and overexpression of IL-1 cytokines. The factors that trigger these events are, however, poorly understood. By investigating pustular forms of psoriasis, we show that human neutrophils constitutively express IL-26 and abundantly release it from granular stores upon activation. In pustular psoriasis, neutrophil-derived IL-26 drives the pathogenic autoinflammation process by inducing the expression of IL-1 cytokines and chemokines that further recruit neutrophils. This occurs via activation of IL-26R in keratinocytes and via the formation of complexes between IL-26 and microbiota DNA, which trigger TLR9 activation of neutrophils. Thus our findings identify neutrophils as an important source of IL-26 and point to IL-26 as the key link between neutrophils and a self-sustaining autoinflammation loop in pustular psoriasis.

Keywords
  • Humans
  • Neutrophils
  • Psoriasis
  • Interleukins
  • Cytokines
  • Interleukin-1
Affiliation entities Not a UNIGE publication
Citation (ISO format)
BALDO, Alessia et al. Human neutrophils drive skin autoinflammation by releasing interleukin (IL)-26. In: The journal of experimental medicine, 2024, vol. 221, n° 5, p. e20231464. doi: 10.1084/jem.20231464
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Identifiers
Journal ISSN0022-1007
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