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IL-1α stimulation restores epidermal permeability and antimicrobial barriers compromised by topical tacrolimus. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Previous research indicated that using topical calcineurin inhibitors like tacrolimus slows down the recovery of the skin barrier after it gets disrupted, partly due to reduced lipid synthesis and harmful effects on antimicrobial peptides and IL-1α.
  • This study found that applying imiquimod, an IL-1α inducer, helped restore the skin's barrier function in both human and mouse models, enhancing the production of important lipids and improving skin integrity.
  • The positive effects of IL-1α stimulation on skin barrier recovery were linked to increased lipid synthesis, production of lamellar bodies, and expression of antimicrobial peptides, indicating its potential for treating skin impairment caused by tacrolimus.

Article Abstract

In a previous study, we showed that barrier recovery was delayed after acute barrier disruption in the skin treated with topical calcineurin inhibitors. Tacrolimus decreases lipid synthesis and the expressions of antimicrobial peptide (AMP) and IL-1α in the epidermis. IL-1α is an important cytokine for improving barrier function, lamellar body (LB) production, and lipid synthesis in keratinocytes (KCs). We aimed to evaluate whether IL-1α stimulation could restore the barrier dysfunction observed in tacrolimus-treated skin. Topical imiquimod, an IL-1α inducer, restored the epidermal permeability barrier recovery that had been inhibited by tacrolimus treatment in human (n=15) and murine (n=10) skins, and improved stratum corneum integrity by restoring corneodosmosomes in murine skin (n=6). Imiquimod co-applied on the epidermis resulted in an increase in the production of LB and three major lipid synthesis-related enzymes, and in the expressions of mBD3, CRAMP, and IL-1α (n=5). Furthermore, intracutaneous injection of IL-1α restored permeability barrier recovery (n=6). In IL-1 type 1 receptor knockout mice, topical imiquimod was unable to restore permeability barrier recovery after tacrolimus treatment (n=21). In conclusion, IL-1α stimulation induced positive effects on epidermal permeability and antimicrobial barrier functions in tacrolimus-treated skin. These positive effects were mediated by an increase in epidermal lipid synthesis, LB production, and AMP expression.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/jid.2010.344DOI Listing

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