特应性皮炎
转录因子
免疫学
免疫系统
细胞
过敏
钠
化学
医学
生物
细胞生物学
癌症研究
生物化学
基因
有机化学
作者
Julia Matthias,Julia Zeiträg,Rebecca Noster,Hanna Meinl,Ying-Yin Chao,H. Gerstenberg,Florian Jeschke,Gilles Gasparoni,Anna Welle,Jörn Walter,Karl Nordström,Klaus Eberhardt,Dennis Renisch,Sainitin Donakonda,Percy A. Knolle,Dominik Soll,Stephan Grabbe,Natalie Garzorz‐Stark,Kilian Eyerich,Tilo Biedermann,Dirk Baumjohann,Christina E. Zielinski
摘要
One sentence summary Sodium is an ionic checkpoint for the induction and amplification of human Th2 cell responses and shapes the atopic skin microenvironment, where it could serve as a novel therapeutic target for Th2 mediated diseases. Abstract There has been a strong increase in the incidence of allergic diseases over the last 50 years. Environmental factors most likely account for this phenomenon. However, the nature of these factors and the mode of action by which they induce the type 2 immune deviation, which is characteristic of atopic diseases, remains unclear. It has previously been reported that dietary sodium chloride promotes the polarization of Th17 cells with implications for autoimmune diseases such as multiple sclerosis. Here, we demonstrate that sodium chloride also potently promotes Th2 cell responses on multiple regulatory levels. Sodium chloride enhanced IL-4 and IL-13 production while suppressing IFN- γ production in effector T cells. It diverted alternative T cell fates into the Th2 cell phenotype and also induced de novo Th2 cell polarization from naïve T cell precursors. Mechanistically, it exerted its effects via the osmosensitive transcription factor NFAT-5 and the kinase SGK-1, which regulated Th2 signature cytokines and master transcription factors in hyperosmolar salt conditions. The skin of patients suffering from atopic dermatitis contained highly elevated amounts of sodium compared to non-lesional atopic and healthy skin. This demonstrates that sodium chloride represents a so far overlooked cutaneous microenvironmental factor in atopic dermatitis that can induce Th2 cell responses, the orchestrators of allergic diseases. Together, our data propose ionic signaling through sodium chloride as a novel checkpoint and potential therapeutic target for type 2 immunity and its associated allergic diseases.
科研通智能强力驱动
Strongly Powered by AbleSci AI