[HTML][HTML] Overproduction of Th2-specific chemokines in NC/Nga mice exhibiting atopic dermatitis–like lesions

C Vestergaard, H Yoneyama, M Murai… - The Journal of …, 1999 - Am Soc Clin Investig
C Vestergaard, H Yoneyama, M Murai, K Nakamura, K Tamaki, Y Terashima, T Imai
The Journal of clinical investigation, 1999Am Soc Clin Investig
We have examined the expression of chemokines and their receptors in the atopic dermatitis–
like (AD-like) lesions of NC/Nga mice. Such lesions develop when the mice are kept in
conventional conditions, but not when they are kept isolated from specific pathogens. The
thymus-and activation-regulated chemokine TARC is unexpectedly highly expressed in the
basal epidermis of 14-week-old mice with lesions, whereas it is not expressed in the skin
without lesions. Production of TARC by keratinocytes was confirmed by culturing murine …
We have examined the expression of chemokines and their receptors in the atopic dermatitis–like (AD-like) lesions of NC/Nga mice. Such lesions develop when the mice are kept in conventional conditions, but not when they are kept isolated from specific pathogens. The thymus- and activation-regulated chemokine TARC is unexpectedly highly expressed in the basal epidermis of 14-week-old mice with lesions, whereas it is not expressed in the skin without lesions. Production of TARC by keratinocytes was confirmed by culturing murine keratinocytic cell line cells (PAM212) with TNF-α, IFN-γ, or IL-1β. Expression of another Th2 chemokine, macrophage-derived chemokine (MDC), was observed in the skin from mice kept in both conventional and pathogen-free conditions, but expression of MDC was increased severalfold in the skin with lesions. The cellular origin of MDC was identified to be dermal dendritic cells. Infiltration of the skin by IL-4–producing T cells and mast cells, and the increase of CCR4 mRNA in the skin, coincided with the development of AD lesions. These observations indicate that TARC and MDC actively participate in the pathogenesis of AD-like lesions in NC/Nga mice and that these Th2 chemokines could be novel targets for intervention therapy of AD in humans.
The Journal of Clinical Investigation