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Single-cell transcriptomics reveals a senescence-associated IL-6/CCR6 axis driving radiodermatitis.

Mor PaldorOrr Levkovitch-SianyDana EidelshteinRevital AdarClaes D EnkYitzhak MarmarySharona ElgavishYuval NevoHadar BenyaminiInbar PlaschkesShiri KleinAlex MaliStefan Rose-JohnAmnon PeledEithan GalunJonathan H Axelrod
Published in: EMBO molecular medicine (2022)
Irradiation-induced alopecia and dermatitis (IRIAD) are two of the most visually recognized complications of radiotherapy, of which the molecular and cellular basis remains largely unclear. By combining scRNA-seq analysis of whole skin-derived irradiated cells with genetic ablation and molecular inhibition studies, we show that senescence-associated IL-6 and IL-1 signaling, together with IL-17 upregulation and CCR6 + -mediated immune cell migration, are crucial drivers of IRIAD. Bioinformatics analysis colocalized irradiation-induced IL-6 signaling with senescence pathway upregulation largely within epidermal hair follicles, basal keratinocytes, and dermal fibroblasts. Loss of cytokine signaling by genetic ablation in IL-6 -/- or IL-1R -/- mice, or by molecular blockade, strongly ameliorated IRIAD, as did deficiency of CCL20/CCR6-mediated immune cell migration in CCR6 -/- mice. Moreover, IL-6 deficiency strongly reduced IL-17, IL-22, CCL20, and CCR6 upregulation, whereas CCR6 deficiency reciprocally diminished IL-6, IL-17, CCL3, and MHC upregulation, suggesting that proximity-dependent cellular cross talk promotes IRIAD. Therapeutically, topical application of Janus kinase blockers or inhibition of T-cell activation by cyclosporine effectively reduced IRIAD, suggesting the potential of targeted approaches for the treatment of dermal side effects in radiotherapy patients.
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