AI Article Synopsis

  • Defective proteases and their inhibitors are linked to skin diseases like psoriasis, with SerpinB7 identified as a key skin-specific protease inhibitor.
  • SerpinB7 is highly expressed in psoriatic skin and its absence leads to issues like impaired skin architecture and inflammation in both humans and mice.
  • The research suggests that SerpinB7 regulates keratinocyte differentiation and inflammation through calcium ion channel proteins, making it a potential target for psoriasis treatments.

Article Abstract

Defective execution of proteases and protease inhibitors that mediate abnormal signaling cascades is emerging as a key contributor to skin diseases, such as psoriasis. SerpinB7 is identified as a skin-specific endogenous protease inhibitor, but the role and underlying mechanism in psoriasis are poorly understood. Here we found that SerpinB7 is highly expressed in psoriatic keratinocytes of patients and imiquimod-induced psoriatic lesions in mice. SerpinB7 mice showed abnormal epidermal barrier integrity and skin architecture in homeostasis, and aggravated psoriatic lesion with inhibiting terminal differentiation and increasing inflammatory cells infiltration compared to SerpinB7 mice after Imiquimod treatment. Mechanistically, SerpinB7 deficiency results in excessive proliferation and impaired differentiation, as well as increased chemokines and antimicrobial peptide expression in normal human epidermal keratinocyte and mouse primary keratinocyte. Transcriptomics and proteomics results showed that the SeprinB7 deficiency affected keratinocyte differentiation and proinflammatory cytokines, possibly by affecting the calcium ion channel-related proteins. Notably, we demonstrated that SerpinB7 deficiency prevented the increase in intracellular Ca influx, which was partly eliminated by the intracellular Ca chelator BAPTA-AM. Our findings first described the critical role of SerpinB7 in the regulation of keratinocyte differentiation and psoriatic microenvironment mediated via keratinocytes' intracellular calcium flux, proposing a new candidate for therapeutic targets in psoriasis.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9304369PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41419-022-05045-8DOI Listing

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