作者
David Wu,Ashley Hailer,Sijia Wang,Michelle Yuan,Jamie S. Chan,Abdallah Kurdi,David Han,Hira Ali,H. Blaize D’Angio,Aaron T. Mayer,Maha K. Rahim,Ayano Kondo,Daniel M. Klufas,Esther Kim,A. Hunter Shain,Jaehyuk Choi,Tina Bhutani,Gregory L. Simpson,Roy C. Grekin,Roberto R. Ricardo-González,Elizabeth Purdom,Jeffrey P. North,Jeffrey B. Cheng,Raymond J. Cho
摘要
Psoriasis vulgaris and other chronic inflammatory diseases improve markedly with therapeutic blockade of interleukin-23 (IL-23) signaling, but the genetic mechanisms underlying clinical responses remain poorly understood. Using single-cell transcriptomics, we profiled immune cells isolated from lesional psoriatic skin before and during IL-23 blockade. In clinically responsive patients, a psoriatic transcriptional signature in skin-resident memory T cells was strongly attenuated. In contrast, poorly responsive patients were distinguished by persistent activation of IL-17–producing T (T17) cells, a mechanism distinct from alternative cytokine signaling or resistance isolated to epidermal keratinocytes. Even in IL-23 blockade–responsive patients, we detected a recurring set of recalcitrant, disease-specific transcriptional abnormalities. This irreversible immunological state may necessitate ongoing IL-23 inhibition. Spatial transcriptomic analyses also suggested that successful IL-23 blockade requires dampening of >90% of IL-17–induced response in lymphocyte-adjacent keratinocytes, an unexpectedly high threshold. Collectively, our data establish a patient-level paradigm for dissecting responses to immunomodulatory treatments.