Topical antibiotics limit depigmentation in a mouse model of vitiligo.
Ahmed Ahmed TouniRachel SohnCormac CosgroveRohan S ShivdeEmilia R DellaceccaRasha T A Abdel-AzizKettil CedercreutzStefan J GreenHossam Abdel-WahabI Caroline Le PoolePublished in: Pigment cell & melanoma research (2024)
Oral neomycin administration impacts the gut microbiome and delays vitiligo development in mice, and topical antibiotics may likewise allow the microbiome to preserve skin health and delay depigmentation. Here, we examined the effects of 6-week topical antibiotic treatment on vitiligo-prone pmel-1 mice. Bacitracin, Neosporin, or Vaseline were applied to one denuded flank, while the contralateral flank was treated with Vaseline in all mice. Ventral depigmentation was quantified weekly. We found that topical Neosporin treatment significantly reduced depigmentation and exhibited effects beyond the treated area, while Bacitracin ointment had no effect. Stool samples collected from four representative mice/group during treatment revealed that Neosporin treatment aligned with reduced abundance of the Alistipes genus in the gut, while relevant changes to the skin microbiome at end point were less apparent. Either antibiotic treatment led to reduced expression of MR1, potentially limiting mucosal-associated invariant T-cell activation, while Neosporin-treated skin selectively revealed significantly reduced CD8+ T-cell abundance. The latter finding aligned with reduced expression of multiple inflammatory markers and markedly increased regulatory T-cell density. Our studies on favorable skin and oral antibiotic treatment share the neomycin compound, and in either case, microbial changes were most apparent in stool samples. Taken together, neomycin-containing antibiotic applications can mediate skin Treg infiltration to limit vitiligo development. Our study highlights the therapeutic potential of short-term antibiotic applications to limit depigmentation vitiligo.
Keyphrases
- wound healing
- mouse model
- soft tissue
- public health
- poor prognosis
- mental health
- type diabetes
- combination therapy
- magnetic resonance
- single cell
- spinal cord
- computed tomography
- transcription factor
- adipose tissue
- cross sectional
- long non coding rna
- deep brain stimulation
- binding protein
- study protocol
- prefrontal cortex
- case control
- human health