Staphylococcus aureus Epicutaneous Exposure Drives Skin Inflammation via IL-36-Mediated T Cell Responses

Staphylococcus aureus colonization contributes to skin inflammation in diseases such as atopic dermatitis, but the signaling pathways involved are unclear. Herein, epicutaneous S. aureus exposure to mouse skin promoted MyD88-dependent skin inflammation initiated by IL-36, but not IL-1α/β, IL-18, or...

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Veröffentlicht in:Cell host & microbe 2017-11, Vol.22 (5), p.653-666.e5
Hauptverfasser: Liu, Haiyun, Archer, Nathan K., Dillen, Carly A., Wang, Yu, Ashbaugh, Alyssa G., Ortines, Roger V., Kao, Tracy, Lee, Steven K., Cai, Shuting S., Miller, Robert J., Marchitto, Mark C., Zhang, Emily, Riggins, Daniel P., Plaut, Roger D., Stibitz, Scott, Geha, Raif S., Miller, Lloyd S.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Staphylococcus aureus colonization contributes to skin inflammation in diseases such as atopic dermatitis, but the signaling pathways involved are unclear. Herein, epicutaneous S. aureus exposure to mouse skin promoted MyD88-dependent skin inflammation initiated by IL-36, but not IL-1α/β, IL-18, or IL-33. By contrast, an intradermal S. aureus challenge promoted MyD88-dependent host defense initiated by IL-1β rather than IL-36, suggesting that different IL-1 cytokines trigger MyD88 signaling depending on the anatomical depth of S. aureus cutaneous exposure. The bacterial virulence factor PSMα, but not α-toxin or δ-toxin, contributed to the skin inflammation, which was driven by IL-17-producing γδ and CD4+ T cells via direct IL-36R signaling in the T cells. Finally, adoptive transfer of IL-36R-expressing T cells to IL-36R-deficient mice was sufficient for mediating S. aureus-induced skin inflammation. Together, this study defines a previously unknown pathway by which S. aureus epicutaneous exposure promotes skin inflammation involving IL-36R/MyD88-dependent IL-17 T cell responses. [Display omitted] •Epicutaneous S. aureus exposure drives MyD88- and IL-36R-dependent skin inflammation•IL-36R/MyD88 signaling by T cells mediates S. aureus-induced skin inflammation•S. aureus virulence factor PSMα, but not α- or δ-toxin, contributes to skin inflammation•IL-36α directly induces T cell production of IL-17A, which is required for inflammation Staphylococcus aureus colonization during atopic dermatitis contributes to skin inflammation, but the underlying mechanisms are unclear. Liu et al. demonstrate that epicutaneous S. aureus exposure drives skin inflammation, which is mediated by bacterial PSMα and host IL-36R/MyD88-induced production of IL-17 by T cells.
ISSN:1931-3128
1934-6069
DOI:10.1016/j.chom.2017.10.006