AI Article Synopsis

  • A subgroup of patients with atopic dermatitis (AD) experiences recurrent herpes simplex virus infections, known as eczema herpeticum (ADEH), prompting a study of the underlying transcriptional mechanisms.
  • RNA sequencing revealed significant dysregulation in gene expression of the epidermis and dermis in ADEH patients, with a notable increase in genes related to type 2 cytokine and interferon inflammatory pathways.
  • The findings suggest that the unique inflammation and altered epidermal differentiation in ADEH patients contribute to their heightened risk for eczema herpeticum, guiding future research on this condition.

Article Abstract

A subgroup of patients with atopic dermatitis (AD) suffers from recurrent, disseminated herpes simplex virus skin infection, termed eczema herpeticum. To determine the transcriptional mechanisms of the skin and immune system pathobiology that underlie development of AD with eczema herpeticum (ADEH), we performed RNA-sequencing analysis of nonlesional skin (epidermis, dermis) from AD patients with and without a history of ADEH (ADEH, n = 15; ADEH, n = 13) along with healthy controls (n = 15). We also performed RNA sequencing on participants' plasmacytoid dendritic cells infected in vitro with herpes simplex virus 1. ADEH patients exhibited dysregulated gene expression, limited in the dermis (14 differentially expressed genes) and more widespread in the epidermis (129 differentially expressed genes). ADEH-upregulated epidermal differentially expressed genes were enriched in type 2 cytokine ( , , ), interferon (, , and IL-36γ () inflammatory gene pathways. All ADEH participants exhibited type 2 cytokine and inteferon endotypes, and 87% were IL36G-high. In contrast, these endotypes were more variably expressed among ADEH participants. ADEH skin also had dysregulated epidermal differentiation complex gene expression of the late-cornified envelope, S100A, and small proline-rich gene families, which are involved in skin barrier function and antimicrobial activities. Plasmacytoid dendritic cell transcriptional responses to herpes simplex virus 1 infection were unaltered by ADEH status. The study concluded that the pathobiology underlying ADEH risk is associated with a unique, multifaceted epidermal inflammation that accompanies dysregulation of epidermal differentiation complex genes. These findings will help direct future studies that define how these inflammatory patterns may drive risk of eczema herpeticum in AD.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11239700PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.xjidi.2024.100279DOI Listing

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