Card14e138a signalling in keratinocytes induces tnf-dependent skin and systemic inflammation

Joan Manils, Louise V. Webb, Ashleigh Howes, Julia Janzen, Stefan Boeing, Anne M. Bowcock, Steven C. Ley

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

22 Scopus citations

Abstract

To investigate how the CARD14E138A psoriasis-associated mutation induces skin inflammation, a knock-in mouse strain was generated that allows tamoxifen-induced expression of the homologous Card14E138A mutation from the endogenous mouse Card14 locus. Heterozygous expression of CARD14E138A rapidly induced skin acanthosis, immune cell infiltration and expression of psoriasis-associated pro-inflammatory genes. Homozygous expression of CARD14E138A induced more extensive skin inflammation and a severe systemic disease involving infiltration of myeloid cells in multiple organs, temperature reduction, weight loss and organ failure. This severe phenotype resembled acute exacerbations of generalised pustular psoriasis (GPP), a rare form of psoriasis that can be caused by CARD14 mutations in patients. CARD14E138A-induced skin inflammation and systemic disease were independent of adaptive immune cells, ameliorated by blocking TNF and induced by CARD14E138A signalling only in keratinocytes. These results suggest that anti-inflammatory therapies specifically targeting keratinocytes, rather than systemic biologicals, might be effective for GPP treatment early in disease progression.

Original languageEnglish
Article numbere56720
Pages (from-to)1-32
Number of pages32
JournaleLife
Volume9
DOIs
StatePublished - Jun 2020

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