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1.
Annu Rev Immunol ; 41: 207-228, 2023 04 26.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36696569

ABSTRACT

The epithelial tissues that line our body, such as the skin and gut, have remarkable regenerative prowess and continually renew throughout our lifetimes. Owing to their barrier function, these tissues have also evolved sophisticated repair mechanisms to swiftly heal and limit the penetration of harmful agents following injury. Researchers now appreciate that epithelial regeneration and repair are not autonomous processes but rely on a dynamic cross talk with immunity. A wealth of clinical and experimental data point to the functional coupling of reparative and inflammatory responses as two sides of the same coin. Here we bring to the fore the immunological signals that underlie homeostatic epithelial regeneration and restitution following damage. We review our current understanding of how immune cells contribute to distinct phases of repair. When unchecked, immune-mediated repair programs are co-opted to fuel epithelial pathologies such as cancer, psoriasis, and inflammatory bowel diseases. Thus, understanding the reparative functions of immunity may advance therapeutic innovation in regenerative medicine and epithelial inflammatory diseases.


Subject(s)
Inflammatory Bowel Diseases , Skin , Humans , Animals , Epithelium , Regeneration/physiology
2.
Annu Rev Immunol ; 35: 469-499, 2017 04 26.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28226228

ABSTRACT

Professional antigen-presenting cells (APCs) in the skin include dendritic cells, monocytes, and macrophages. They are highly dynamic, with the capacity to enter skin from the peripheral circulation, patrol within tissue, and migrate through lymphatics to draining lymph nodes. Skin APCs are endowed with antigen-sensing, -processing, and -presenting machinery and play key roles in initiating, modulating, and resolving cutaneous inflammation. Skin APCs are a highly heterogeneous population with functionally specialized subsets that are developmentally imprinted and modulated by local tissue microenvironmental and inflammatory cues. This review explores recent advances that have allowed for a more accurate taxonomy of APC subsets found in both mouse and human skin. It also examines the functional specificity of individual APC subsets and their collaboration with other immune cell types that together promote adaptive T cell and regional cutaneous immune responses during homeostasis, inflammation, and disease.


Subject(s)
Antigen-Presenting Cells/immunology , Dendritic Cells/immunology , Langerhans Cells/immunology , Macrophages/immunology , Monocytes/immunology , Skin/immunology , T-Lymphocytes/immunology , Animals , Antigen Presentation , Cell Movement , Homeostasis , Humans , Inflammation , Lymphocyte Activation , Mice
3.
Cell ; 187(18): 4814-4818, 2024 Sep 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39241741

ABSTRACT

In defying conventional views that dismissed itch as trivial, I persisted in studying basophils and ILC2s in human skin and atopic dermatitis. My research on JAK inhibitors for itch ultimately led to FDA-approved drugs. This is my story of disregarding categories and definitions-a story about an unconventional path in science that emphasizes innovation over conformity.


Subject(s)
Dermatitis, Atopic , Disease Models, Animal , Pruritus , Humans , Animals , Mice , Dermatitis, Atopic/pathology , Dermatitis, Atopic/drug therapy , Dermatitis, Atopic/immunology , History, 20th Century , History, 21st Century , Basophils/metabolism , Janus Kinase Inhibitors/therapeutic use , Janus Kinase Inhibitors/pharmacology , Skin/pathology , Skin/metabolism
4.
Cell ; 187(19): 5298-5315.e19, 2024 Sep 19.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39168124

ABSTRACT

During wound healing, different pools of stem cells (SCs) contribute to skin repair. However, how SCs become activated and drive the tissue remodeling essential for skin repair is still poorly understood. Here, by developing a mouse model allowing lineage tracing and basal cell lineage ablation, we monitor SC fate and tissue dynamics during regeneration using confocal and intravital imaging. Analysis of basal cell rearrangements shows dynamic transitions from a solid-like homeostatic state to a fluid-like state allowing tissue remodeling during repair, as predicted by a minimal mathematical modeling of the spatiotemporal dynamics and fate behavior of basal cells. The basal cell layer progressively returns to a solid-like state with re-epithelialization. Bulk, single-cell RNA, and epigenetic profiling of SCs, together with functional experiments, uncover a common regenerative state regulated by the EGFR/AP1 axis activated during tissue fluidization that is essential for skin SC activation and tissue repair.


Subject(s)
Skin , Wound Healing , Animals , Mice , Skin/metabolism , ErbB Receptors/metabolism , Stem Cells/metabolism , Stem Cells/cytology , Cell Lineage , Regeneration , Mice, Inbred C57BL , Re-Epithelialization , Cell Differentiation , Keratinocytes/metabolism , Keratinocytes/cytology
5.
Cell ; 187(14): 3541-3562.e51, 2024 Jul 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38996487

ABSTRACT

Analyses of ancient DNA typically involve sequencing the surviving short oligonucleotides and aligning to genome assemblies from related, modern species. Here, we report that skin from a female woolly mammoth (†Mammuthus primigenius) that died 52,000 years ago retained its ancient genome architecture. We use PaleoHi-C to map chromatin contacts and assemble its genome, yielding 28 chromosome-length scaffolds. Chromosome territories, compartments, loops, Barr bodies, and inactive X chromosome (Xi) superdomains persist. The active and inactive genome compartments in mammoth skin more closely resemble Asian elephant skin than other elephant tissues. Our analyses uncover new biology. Differences in compartmentalization reveal genes whose transcription was potentially altered in mammoths vs. elephants. Mammoth Xi has a tetradic architecture, not bipartite like human and mouse. We hypothesize that, shortly after this mammoth's death, the sample spontaneously freeze-dried in the Siberian cold, leading to a glass transition that preserved subfossils of ancient chromosomes at nanometer scale.


Subject(s)
Genome , Mammoths , Skin , Animals , Mammoths/genetics , Genome/genetics , Female , Elephants/genetics , Chromatin/genetics , Fossils , DNA, Ancient/analysis , Mice , Humans , X Chromosome/genetics
6.
Cell ; 187(6): 1508-1526.e16, 2024 Mar 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38442711

ABSTRACT

Dorsal root ganglia (DRG) somatosensory neurons detect mechanical, thermal, and chemical stimuli acting on the body. Achieving a holistic view of how different DRG neuron subtypes relay neural signals from the periphery to the CNS has been challenging with existing tools. Here, we develop and curate a mouse genetic toolkit that allows for interrogating the properties and functions of distinct cutaneous targeting DRG neuron subtypes. These tools have enabled a broad morphological analysis, which revealed distinct cutaneous axon arborization areas and branching patterns of the transcriptionally distinct DRG neuron subtypes. Moreover, in vivo physiological analysis revealed that each subtype has a distinct threshold and range of responses to mechanical and/or thermal stimuli. These findings support a model in which morphologically and physiologically distinct cutaneous DRG sensory neuron subtypes tile mechanical and thermal stimulus space to collectively encode a wide range of natural stimuli.


Subject(s)
Ganglia, Spinal , Sensory Receptor Cells , Single-Cell Gene Expression Analysis , Animals , Mice , Ganglia, Spinal/cytology , Sensory Receptor Cells/cytology , Skin/innervation
7.
Cell ; 187(11): 2817-2837.e31, 2024 05 23.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38701783

ABSTRACT

FMS-related tyrosine kinase 3 ligand (FLT3L), encoded by FLT3LG, is a hematopoietic factor essential for the development of natural killer (NK) cells, B cells, and dendritic cells (DCs) in mice. We describe three humans homozygous for a loss-of-function FLT3LG variant with a history of various recurrent infections, including severe cutaneous warts. The patients' bone marrow (BM) was hypoplastic, with low levels of hematopoietic progenitors, particularly myeloid and B cell precursors. Counts of B cells, monocytes, and DCs were low in the patients' blood, whereas the other blood subsets, including NK cells, were affected only moderately, if at all. The patients had normal counts of Langerhans cells (LCs) and dermal macrophages in the skin but lacked dermal DCs. Thus, FLT3L is required for B cell and DC development in mice and humans. However, unlike its murine counterpart, human FLT3L is required for the development of monocytes but not NK cells.


Subject(s)
Killer Cells, Natural , Membrane Proteins , Animals , Female , Humans , Male , Mice , B-Lymphocytes/metabolism , B-Lymphocytes/cytology , Bone Marrow/metabolism , Cell Lineage , Dendritic Cells/metabolism , Hematopoiesis , Hematopoietic Stem Cells/metabolism , Hematopoietic Stem Cells/cytology , Killer Cells, Natural/metabolism , Killer Cells, Natural/immunology , Langerhans Cells/metabolism , Membrane Proteins/metabolism , Membrane Proteins/genetics , Monocytes/metabolism , Skin/metabolism , Mice, Inbred C57BL
8.
Cell ; 186(5): 940-956.e20, 2023 03 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36764291

ABSTRACT

Fingerprints are complex and individually unique patterns in the skin. Established prenatally, the molecular and cellular mechanisms that guide fingerprint ridge formation and their intricate arrangements are unknown. Here we show that fingerprint ridges are epithelial structures that undergo a truncated hair follicle developmental program and fail to recruit a mesenchymal condensate. Their spatial pattern is established by a Turing reaction-diffusion system, based on signaling between EDAR, WNT, and antagonistic BMP pathways. These signals resolve epithelial growth into bands of focalized proliferation under a precociously differentiated suprabasal layer. Ridge formation occurs as a set of waves spreading from variable initiation sites defined by the local signaling environments and anatomical intricacies of the digit, with the propagation and meeting of these waves determining the type of pattern that forms. Relying on a dynamic patterning system triggered at spatially distinct sites generates the characteristic types and unending variation of human fingerprint patterns.


Subject(s)
Signal Transduction , Skin , Humans , Skin/metabolism
9.
Cell ; 186(11): 2345-2360.e16, 2023 05 25.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37167971

ABSTRACT

A functional network of blood vessels is essential for organ growth and homeostasis, yet how the vasculature matures and maintains homeostasis remains elusive in live mice. By longitudinally tracking the same neonatal endothelial cells (ECs) over days to weeks, we found that capillary plexus expansion is driven by vessel regression to optimize network perfusion. Neonatal ECs rearrange positions to evenly distribute throughout the developing plexus and become positionally stable in adulthood. Upon local ablation, adult ECs survive through a plasmalemmal self-repair response, while neonatal ECs are predisposed to die. Furthermore, adult ECs reactivate migration to assist vessel repair. Global ablation reveals coordinated maintenance of the adult vascular architecture that allows for eventual network recovery. Lastly, neonatal remodeling and adult maintenance of the skin vascular plexus are orchestrated by temporally restricted, neonatal VEGFR2 signaling. Our work sheds light on fundamental mechanisms that underlie both vascular maturation and adult homeostasis in vivo.


Subject(s)
Endothelial Cells , Neovascularization, Physiologic , Animals , Mice , Endothelial Cells/physiology , Neovascularization, Physiologic/physiology , Skin , Cell Membrane
10.
Cell ; 186(16): 3368-3385.e18, 2023 08 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37541195

ABSTRACT

The properties of dorsal root ganglia (DRG) neurons that innervate the distal colon are poorly defined, hindering our understanding of their roles in normal physiology and gastrointestinal (GI) disease. Here, we report genetically defined subsets of colon-innervating DRG neurons with diverse morphologic and physiologic properties. Four colon-innervating DRG neuron populations are mechanosensitive and exhibit distinct force thresholds to colon distension. The highest threshold population, selectively labeled using Bmpr1b genetic tools, is necessary and sufficient for behavioral responses to high colon distension, which is partly mediated by the mechanosensory ion channel Piezo2. This Aδ-HTMR population mediates behavioral over-reactivity to colon distension caused by inflammation in a model of inflammatory bowel disease. Thus, like cutaneous DRG mechanoreceptor populations, colon-innervating mechanoreceptors exhibit distinct anatomical and physiological properties and tile force threshold space, and genetically defined colon-innervating HTMRs mediate pathophysiological responses to colon distension, revealing a target population for therapeutic intervention.


Subject(s)
Ganglia, Spinal , Mechanoreceptors , Mechanoreceptors/physiology , Colon , Neurons , Skin/innervation
11.
Cell ; 186(3): 577-590.e16, 2023 02 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36693373

ABSTRACT

Pleasurable touch is paramount during social behavior, including sexual encounters. However, the identity and precise role of sensory neurons that transduce sexual touch remain unknown. A population of sensory neurons labeled by developmental expression of the G protein-coupled receptor Mrgprb4 detects mechanical stimulation in mice. Here, we study the social relevance of Mrgprb4-lineage neurons and reveal that these neurons are required for sexual receptivity and sufficient to induce dopamine release in the brain. Even in social isolation, optogenetic stimulation of Mrgprb4-lineage neurons through the back skin is sufficient to induce a conditioned place preference and a striking dorsiflexion resembling the lordotic copulatory posture. In the absence of Mrgprb4-lineage neurons, female mice no longer find male mounts rewarding: sexual receptivity is supplanted by aggression and a coincident decline in dopamine release in the nucleus accumbens. Together, these findings establish that Mrgprb4-lineage neurons initiate a skin-to-brain circuit encoding the rewarding quality of social touch.


Subject(s)
Dopamine , Touch , Mice , Male , Female , Animals , Dopamine/metabolism , Nucleus Accumbens/metabolism , Sensory Receptor Cells/metabolism , Skin/metabolism , Reward , Dopaminergic Neurons/metabolism , Optogenetics , Receptors, G-Protein-Coupled/metabolism
12.
Cell ; 185(11): 1960-1973.e11, 2022 05 26.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35551765

ABSTRACT

During vertebrate embryogenesis, cell collectives engage in coordinated behavior to form tissue structures of increasing complexity. In the avian skin, assembly into follicles depends on intrinsic mechanical forces of the dermis, but how cell mechanics initiate pattern formation is not known. Here, we reconstitute the initiation of follicle patterning ex vivo using only freshly dissociated avian dermal cells and collagen. We find that contractile cells physically rearrange the extracellular matrix (ECM) and that ECM rearrangement further aligns cells. This exchange transforms a mechanically unlinked collective of dermal cells into a continuum, with coherent, long-range order. Combining theory with experiment, we show that this ordered cell-ECM layer behaves as an active contractile fluid that spontaneously forms regular patterns. Our study illustrates a role for mesenchymal dynamics in generating cell-level ordering and tissue-level patterning through a fluid instability-processes that may be at play across morphological symmetry-breaking contexts.


Subject(s)
Extracellular Matrix , Hair Follicle , Animals , Collagen , Skin , Vertebrates
13.
Cell ; 185(22): 4040-4042, 2022 10 27.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36306730

ABSTRACT

Mosquitoes rely on their sense of smell to find humans to secure a blood meal, transmitting deadly diseases with their bite. In this issue of Cell, De Obaldía and colleagues examine why mosquitoes bite some people more than others and report an association with the level of carboxylic acids in the human skin odor.


Subject(s)
Culicidae , Animals , Humans , Smell , Odorants , Carboxylic Acids , Skin
14.
Cell ; 185(14): 2395-2397, 2022 07 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35803242

ABSTRACT

Flaviviruses, such as Dengue and Zika viruses, infect millions of people worldwide using mosquitos as vectors. In this issue of Cell, Zhang et al. reveal how these viruses manipulate the skin microbiome of infected hosts in a way that increases vector recruitment and viral spread. They propose vitamin A as a way to counteract the virus and decrease transmission.


Subject(s)
Flavivirus Infections , Flavivirus , Intercellular Signaling Peptides and Proteins/metabolism , Skin , Animals , Culicidae/virology , Dengue , Flavivirus/physiology , Flavivirus Infections/microbiology , Flavivirus Infections/transmission , Humans , Periodicals as Topic , Skin/metabolism , Skin/microbiology , Vector Borne Diseases , Zika Virus Infection
15.
Cell ; 185(25): 4675-4677, 2022 Dec 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36493748

ABSTRACT

Wound healing in adult mammalian tissues generally involves scarring instead of tissue regeneration. A study in this issue of Cell reveals that after injury, reindeer antler skin regenerates by priming regenerative genes in wound fibroblasts instead of forming a scar through an inflammatory gene program.


Subject(s)
Reindeer , Animals , Wound Healing , Cicatrix/pathology , Skin/pathology , Fibroblasts/pathology
16.
Cell ; 185(25): 4717-4736.e25, 2022 Dec 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36493752

ABSTRACT

Adult mammalian skin wounds heal by forming fibrotic scars. We report that full-thickness injuries of reindeer antler skin (velvet) regenerate, whereas back skin forms fibrotic scar. Single-cell multi-omics reveal that uninjured velvet fibroblasts resemble human fetal fibroblasts, whereas back skin fibroblasts express inflammatory mediators mimicking pro-fibrotic adult human and rodent fibroblasts. Consequently, injury elicits site-specific immune responses: back skin fibroblasts amplify myeloid infiltration and maturation during repair, whereas velvet fibroblasts adopt an immunosuppressive phenotype that restricts leukocyte recruitment and hastens immune resolution. Ectopic transplantation of velvet to scar-forming back skin is initially regenerative, but progressively transitions to a fibrotic phenotype akin to the scarless fetal-to-scar-forming transition reported in humans. Skin regeneration is diminished by intensifying, or enhanced by neutralizing, these pathologic fibroblast-immune interactions. Reindeer represent a powerful comparative model for interrogating divergent wound healing outcomes, and our results nominate decoupling of fibroblast-immune interactions as a promising approach to mitigate scar.


Subject(s)
Reindeer , Wound Healing , Adult , Animals , Humans , Cicatrix/pathology , Fibroblasts/pathology , Skin Transplantation , Skin/pathology , Fetus/pathology
17.
Cell ; 185(8): 1373-1388.e20, 2022 04 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35381199

ABSTRACT

Systemic sclerosis (scleroderma, SSc) is an incurable autoimmune disease with high morbidity and mortality rates. Here, we conducted a population-scale single-cell genomic analysis of skin and blood samples of 56 healthy controls and 97 SSc patients at different stages of the disease. We found immune compartment dysfunction only in a specific subtype of diffuse SSc patients but global dysregulation of the stromal compartment, particularly in a previously undefined subset of LGR5+-scleroderma-associated fibroblasts (ScAFs). ScAFs are perturbed morphologically and molecularly in SSc patients. Single-cell multiome profiling of stromal cells revealed ScAF-specific markers, pathways, regulatory elements, and transcription factors underlining disease development. Systematic analysis of these molecular features with clinical metadata associates specific ScAF targets with disease pathogenesis and SSc clinical traits. Our high-resolution atlas of the sclerodermatous skin spectrum will enable a paradigm shift in the understanding of SSc disease and facilitate the development of biomarkers and therapeutic strategies.


Subject(s)
Scleroderma, Systemic , Cells, Cultured , Fibroblasts/metabolism , Fibrosis , Humans , Receptors, G-Protein-Coupled/genetics , Receptors, G-Protein-Coupled/metabolism , Scleroderma, Systemic/drug therapy , Scleroderma, Systemic/genetics , Skin/metabolism
18.
Cell ; 185(11): 1809-1810, 2022 05 26.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35584700

ABSTRACT

In this issue of Cell, Palmquist et al. (2022) reconstitute the ordered follicle pattern of avian skin ex vivo and show that this pattern can arise from a mechanical instability arising from cell contractility driving tissue flow.


Subject(s)
Skin
19.
Nat Immunol ; 25(7): 1296-1305, 2024 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38806708

ABSTRACT

Inflammatory pain results from the heightened sensitivity and reduced threshold of nociceptor sensory neurons due to exposure to inflammatory mediators. However, the cellular and transcriptional diversity of immune cell and sensory neuron types makes it challenging to decipher the immune mechanisms underlying pain. Here we used single-cell transcriptomics to determine the immune gene signatures associated with pain development in three skin inflammatory pain models in mice: zymosan injection, skin incision and ultraviolet burn. We found that macrophage and neutrophil recruitment closely mirrored the kinetics of pain development and identified cell-type-specific transcriptional programs associated with pain and its resolution. Using a comprehensive list of potential interactions mediated by receptors, ligands, ion channels and metabolites to generate injury-specific neuroimmune interactomes, we also uncovered that thrombospondin-1 upregulated by immune cells upon injury inhibited nociceptor sensitization. This study lays the groundwork for identifying the neuroimmune axes that modulate pain in diverse disease contexts.


Subject(s)
Nociceptors , Pain , Animals , Mice , Pain/immunology , Pain/metabolism , Nociceptors/metabolism , Transcriptome , Mice, Inbred C57BL , Inflammation/immunology , Male , Macrophages/immunology , Macrophages/metabolism , Disease Models, Animal , Thrombospondin 1/metabolism , Thrombospondin 1/genetics , Skin/immunology , Skin/metabolism , Skin/pathology , Zymosan , Single-Cell Analysis , Neuroimmunomodulation , Gene Expression Profiling , Neutrophils/immunology , Neutrophils/metabolism
20.
Annu Rev Immunol ; 32: 227-55, 2014.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24655295

ABSTRACT

The skin is the front line of defense against insult and injury and contains many epidermal and immune elements that comprise the skin-associated lymphoid tissue (SALT). The reaction of these components to injury allows an effective cutaneous response to restore homeostasis. Psoriasis vulgaris is the best-understood and most accessible human disease that is mediated by T cells and dendritic cells. Inflammatory myeloid dendritic cells release IL-23 and IL-12 to activate IL-17-producing T cells, Th1 cells, and Th22 cells to produce abundant psoriatic cytokines IL-17, IFN-γ, TNF, and IL-22. These cytokines mediate effects on keratinocytes to amplify psoriatic inflammation. Therapeutic studies with anticytokine antibodies have shown the importance of the key cytokines IL-23, TNF, and IL-17 in this process. We discuss the genetic background of psoriasis and its relationship to immune function, specifically genetic mutations, key PSORS loci, single nucleotide polymorphisms, and the skin transcriptome. The association between comorbidities and psoriasis is reviewed by correlating the skin transcriptome and serum proteins. Psoriasis-related cytokine-response pathways are considered in the context of the transcriptome of different mouse models. This approach offers a model for other inflammatory skin and autoimmune diseases.


Subject(s)
Psoriasis/immunology , Animals , Comorbidity , Disease Models, Animal , Genetic Predisposition to Disease , Humans , Mice , Psoriasis/diagnosis , Psoriasis/genetics , Skin/immunology , Skin/pathology , Skin Physiological Phenomena/immunology
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