AI Article Synopsis

  • - The study explores the role of p38 mitogen-activated protein kinase in psoriasis, showing that its activation can lead to psoriatic inflammation in mouse models.
  • - Daily application of the p38 activator anisomycin on mouse skin resulted in psoriatic traits, such as skin thickening and increased inflammatory markers, but these effects were reduced after using a p38 inhibitor, BIRB796.
  • - The findings suggest that targeting p38 could be a promising therapeutic approach for treating psoriasis, as the skin responses were similar to those observed in human psoriasis cases.

Article Abstract

Background: Psoriasis is a chronic inflammatory skin disease characterized by IL-17-mediated immune responses. p38 is known to be highly activated in the psoriatic epidermis; however, whether p38 is involved in the development of psoriasis is unclear.

Objective: We sought to demonstrate that activation of p38 mitogen-activated protein kinase is sufficient to induce psoriatic inflammation in mice and that cutaneous p38 activities are the topical therapeutic targets for psoriasis.

Methods: A p38 activator, anisomycin, was applied daily to murine skin. Transcriptomic analyses were performed to evaluate the similarities of the skin responses to those in human psoriasis and the existing animal model. BIRB796, a small-molecule inhibitor targeting p38 activities, was applied to the murine psoriatic models topically or to human psoriatic skin specimens ex vivo.

Results: Topical treatment with anisomycin induced key signatures in psoriasis, such as epidermal thickening, neutrophil infiltration, and gene expression of Il1a, Il1b, Il6, Il24, Cxcl1, Il23a, and Il17a, in treated murine skin. These responses were fully abrogated by topical treatment with BIRB796, and were reduced in IL-17A-deficient mice. Transcriptomic analyses demonstrated the similarities of anisomycin-induced dermatitis to human psoriasis and imiquimod-induced murine psoriatic dermatitis. Furthermore, BIRB796 targeting of p38 activities reduced expression of psoriasis-related genes in both human keratinocytes stimulated with recombinant IL-17A in vitro and psoriatic skin specimens ex vivo.

Conclusion: Therefore our findings suggest that cutaneous p38 activation can be a key event in patients with psoriasis and a potential topical therapeutic target of a small molecule.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jaci.2019.06.019DOI Listing

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