AI Article Synopsis

  • - Skin epidermis acts as a barrier that protects against dehydration and external threats, but its mechanisms for maintaining integrity under pressure are not well understood.
  • - The study shows that the removal of transcription factors Ovol1 and Ovol2 in adult skin leads to barrier breakdown, increased inflammation, and changes in immune responses, which can affect overall body metabolism.
  • - Long-term effects of losing these transcription factors include failure to gain weight and fat, but these metabolic issues can be partially improved with the immunosuppressant dexamethasone, highlighting connections between skin health and wider bodily functions.

Article Abstract

Skin epidermis constitutes the outer permeability barrier that protects the body from dehydration, heat loss, and myriad external assaults. Mechanisms that maintain barrier integrity in constantly challenged adult skin and how epidermal dysregulation shapes the local immune microenvironment and whole-body metabolism remain poorly understood. Here, we demonstrate that inducible and simultaneous ablation of transcription factor-encoding Ovol1 and Ovol2 in adult epidermis results in barrier dysregulation through impacting epithelial-mesenchymal plasticity and inflammatory gene expression. We find that aberrant skin immune activation then ensues, featuring Langerhans cell mobilization and T cell responses, and leading to elevated levels of secreted inflammatory factors in circulation. Finally, we identify failure to gain body weight and accumulate body fat as long-term consequences of epidermal-specific Ovol1/2 loss and show that these global metabolic changes along with the skin barrier/immune defects are partially rescued by immunosuppressant dexamethasone. Collectively, our study reveals key regulators of adult barrier maintenance and suggests a causal connection between epidermal dysregulation and whole-body metabolism that is in part mediated through aberrant immune activation.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10328084PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.15252/embr.202256214DOI Listing

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