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Keratinocyte FABP5-VCP complex mediates recruitment of neutrophils in psoriasis

Jiaqing Hao, Jianyu Yu, Matthew S. Yorek, Chi-Li Yu, R. Marshall Pope, Michael S. Chimenti, Yiqin Xiong, Aloysius J. Klingelhutz, Ali Jabbari, Bing Li

2023Cell Reports26 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

One of the hallmarks of intractable psoriasis is neutrophil infiltration in skin lesions. However, detailed molecular mechanisms of neutrophil chemotaxis and activation remain unclear. Here, we demonstrate a significant upregulation of epidermal fatty acid binding protein (E-FABP, FABP5) in the skin of human psoriasis and psoriatic mouse models. Genetic deletion of FABP5 in mice by global knockout and keratinocyte conditional (Krt6a-Cre) knockout, but not myeloid cell conditional (LysM-Cre) knockout, attenuates psoriatic symptoms. Immunophenotypic analysis shows that FABP5 deficiency specifically reduces skin recruitment of Ly6G + neutrophils. Mechanistically, activated keratinocytes produce chemokines and cytokines that trigger neutrophil chemotaxis and activation in an FABP5-dependent manner. Proteomic analysis further identifies that FABP5 interacts with valosin-containing protein (VCP), a key player in NF-κB signaling activation. Silencing of FABP5, VCP, or both inhibits NF-κB/neutrophil chemotaxis signaling. Collectively, these data demonstrate dysregulated FABP5 as a molecular mechanism promoting NF-κB signaling and neutrophil infiltration in psoriasis pathogenesis.

Topics & Concepts

ChemokineChemotaxisPsoriasisConditional gene knockoutImmunologyCell biologyKeratinocyteKnockout mouseS100A8Downregulation and upregulationInfiltration (HVAC)ChemistryInflammationCancer researchBiologyCell cultureReceptorBiochemistryGenePhenotypeGeneticsPhysicsThermodynamicsImmune Response and InflammationNF-κB Signaling PathwaysPeroxisome Proliferator-Activated Receptors
Keratinocyte FABP5-VCP complex mediates recruitment of neutrophils in psoriasis | Litcius