Diminished γδ T Cells during Murine Allergic Skin Inflammation Is Mediated by IL-4 Signaling in Keratinocytes

Author:

Zhang Wenwu1ORCID,Pajulas Abigail1,Niese Michelle1ORCID,Zhou Hongming2,Zhao Jennifer1,Akhtar Nahid1ORCID,Turner Matthew J.23ORCID,Kaplan Mark H.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. *Department of Microbiology & Immunology, Indiana University School Medicine, Indianapolis, IN

2. †Department of Dermatology, Indiana University School of Medicine, Indianapolis, IN

3. ‡Richard L. Roudebush VA Medical Center, Indianapolis, IN

Abstract

Abstract Atopic dermatitis results in diminished barrier function and altered production of antimicrobial peptides. Dendritic epidermal T cells (DETCs) play an important role in the wound repair and inflammation process. Our previous work identified an IL-4–dependent loss of DETCs in Stat6VT mice and in the MC903-induced skin inflammation mouse model. However, the mechanisms through which IL-4 mediates the loss of DETCs are unclear. In this study, we show that IL-4Rα germline knockout mice (Il4ra–/–) have increased DETCs, faster wound healing, and increased epidermal differentiation complex gene and fibronectin expression. The absence of IL-4Rα minimized the MC903-induced loss of DETCs, and reciprocal bone marrow chimera experiments in Il4ra–/– and wild-type mice demonstrated structural nonhematopoietic IL-4–responsive cell-mediated DETC homeostasis. Skin keratinocyte-derived IL-15 decreased dramatically in the MC903 model, while injection of IL-15 rescued DETC loss by promoting DETC proliferation and limiting apoptosis. Conditional deletion of IL-4Rα from keratinocytes using Il4rafl/fl K14-Cre mice showed an increase of DETCs, increased IL-15 production, and diminished skin inflammation following wounding. These results suggest that IL-4–dependent effects on DETCs in allergic skin inflammation are mediated by the IL-4Rα receptor of keratinocytes.

Funder

NIAID

NHLBI

Publisher

The American Association of Immunologists

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