Short-Term Exposure to a Western Diet Induces Psoriasiform Dermatitis by Promoting Accumulation of IL-17A–Producing γδ T Cells

A Western diet (WD)—characterized by its high fat and simple sugar content—is thought to predispose individuals to inflammatory skin diseases such as psoriasis through the development of obesity. This scenario, however, is being challenged by emerging data suggesting that dietary components, rather...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of investigative dermatology 2020-09, Vol.140 (9), p.1815-1823
Hauptverfasser: Shi, Zhenrui, Wu, Xuesong, Yu, Sebastian, Huynh, Mindy, Jena, Prasant Kumar, Nguyen, Mimi, Wan, Yu-Jui Yvonne, Hwang, Samuel T.
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container_end_page 1823
container_issue 9
container_start_page 1815
container_title Journal of investigative dermatology
container_volume 140
creator Shi, Zhenrui
Wu, Xuesong
Yu, Sebastian
Huynh, Mindy
Jena, Prasant Kumar
Nguyen, Mimi
Wan, Yu-Jui Yvonne
Hwang, Samuel T.
description A Western diet (WD)—characterized by its high fat and simple sugar content—is thought to predispose individuals to inflammatory skin diseases such as psoriasis through the development of obesity. This scenario, however, is being challenged by emerging data suggesting that dietary components, rather than obesity itself, may exacerbate psoriasis. We herein show that short-term feeding with a diet analogous to the WD in mice leads to T helper type 1–/T helper type 17–biased skin inflammation before significant body weight gain. Feeding for as little as 4 weeks with a WD promoted mild dermatitis and accumulation of IL-17A–producing γδ T cells in the skin. Strikingly, γδ T cells from WD-fed mice exhibited enriched IL-23 receptor expression and increased the potential to produce IL-17A after IL-23 stimulation. In contrast to wild-type mice, WD-fed TCRδ–deficient and CCR6-deficient mice had reduced skin inflammation and IL-17A expression. Supplementation with a bile acid sequestrant, cholestyramine, prevented WD-induced skin inflammation along with a reduction in the infiltration of γδ T cells and the expression of proinflammatory mediators. In summary, our data revealed dietary influences in inflammatory signaling in the skin. The dysregulation of IL-23 pathways and bile acid pathways may be key to the development of WD-associated psoriasiform dermatitis. [Display omitted]
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.jid.2020.01.020
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This scenario, however, is being challenged by emerging data suggesting that dietary components, rather than obesity itself, may exacerbate psoriasis. We herein show that short-term feeding with a diet analogous to the WD in mice leads to T helper type 1–/T helper type 17–biased skin inflammation before significant body weight gain. Feeding for as little as 4 weeks with a WD promoted mild dermatitis and accumulation of IL-17A–producing γδ T cells in the skin. Strikingly, γδ T cells from WD-fed mice exhibited enriched IL-23 receptor expression and increased the potential to produce IL-17A after IL-23 stimulation. In contrast to wild-type mice, WD-fed TCRδ–deficient and CCR6-deficient mice had reduced skin inflammation and IL-17A expression. Supplementation with a bile acid sequestrant, cholestyramine, prevented WD-induced skin inflammation along with a reduction in the infiltration of γδ T cells and the expression of proinflammatory mediators. In summary, our data revealed dietary influences in inflammatory signaling in the skin. The dysregulation of IL-23 pathways and bile acid pathways may be key to the development of WD-associated psoriasiform dermatitis. 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This scenario, however, is being challenged by emerging data suggesting that dietary components, rather than obesity itself, may exacerbate psoriasis. We herein show that short-term feeding with a diet analogous to the WD in mice leads to T helper type 1–/T helper type 17–biased skin inflammation before significant body weight gain. Feeding for as little as 4 weeks with a WD promoted mild dermatitis and accumulation of IL-17A–producing γδ T cells in the skin. Strikingly, γδ T cells from WD-fed mice exhibited enriched IL-23 receptor expression and increased the potential to produce IL-17A after IL-23 stimulation. In contrast to wild-type mice, WD-fed TCRδ–deficient and CCR6-deficient mice had reduced skin inflammation and IL-17A expression. Supplementation with a bile acid sequestrant, cholestyramine, prevented WD-induced skin inflammation along with a reduction in the infiltration of γδ T cells and the expression of proinflammatory mediators. In summary, our data revealed dietary influences in inflammatory signaling in the skin. The dysregulation of IL-23 pathways and bile acid pathways may be key to the development of WD-associated psoriasiform dermatitis. 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This scenario, however, is being challenged by emerging data suggesting that dietary components, rather than obesity itself, may exacerbate psoriasis. We herein show that short-term feeding with a diet analogous to the WD in mice leads to T helper type 1–/T helper type 17–biased skin inflammation before significant body weight gain. Feeding for as little as 4 weeks with a WD promoted mild dermatitis and accumulation of IL-17A–producing γδ T cells in the skin. Strikingly, γδ T cells from WD-fed mice exhibited enriched IL-23 receptor expression and increased the potential to produce IL-17A after IL-23 stimulation. In contrast to wild-type mice, WD-fed TCRδ–deficient and CCR6-deficient mice had reduced skin inflammation and IL-17A expression. Supplementation with a bile acid sequestrant, cholestyramine, prevented WD-induced skin inflammation along with a reduction in the infiltration of γδ T cells and the expression of proinflammatory mediators. 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subjects Animals
Diet, Western - adverse effects
Disease Models, Animal
Female
Humans
Interleukin-17 - metabolism
Interleukin-23 - metabolism
Intraepithelial Lymphocytes - immunology
Intraepithelial Lymphocytes - metabolism
Mice
Mice, Knockout
Psoriasis - etiology
Psoriasis - pathology
Receptors, Antigen, T-Cell, gamma-delta - deficiency
Receptors, Antigen, T-Cell, gamma-delta - genetics
Signal Transduction - immunology
Skin - cytology
Skin - immunology
Skin - pathology
Th1 Cells - immunology
Th1 Cells - metabolism
Th17 Cells - immunology
Th17 Cells - metabolism
title Short-Term Exposure to a Western Diet Induces Psoriasiform Dermatitis by Promoting Accumulation of IL-17A–Producing γδ T Cells
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