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Positionally distinct interferon stimulated dermal immune acting fibroblasts promote neutrophil recruitment in Sweet's syndrome.

Kellen J CavagneroJulie AlbrightFengwu LiTatsuya DokoshiRachael BogleJoseph KirmaJ Michelle KahlenbergAllison C BilliJennifer FoxAnthony CoonCraig J DobryBrian HindsLam C TsoiPaul W HarmsJohann E GudjonssonRichard L Gallo
Published in: bioRxiv : the preprint server for biology (2024)
Sweet's syndrome is a poorly understood inflammatory skin disease characterized by neutrophil infiltration to the dermis. Single-nucleus and bulk transcriptomics of archival clinical samples of Sweet's syndrome revealed a prominent interferon signature in Sweet's syndrome skin that was reduced in tissue from other neutrophilic dermatoses. This signature was observed in different subsets of cells, including fibroblasts that expressed interferon-induced genes. Functionally, this response was supported by analysis of cultured primary human dermal fibroblasts that were observed to highly express neutrophil chemokines in response to activation by type I interferon. Furthermore, single-molecule resolution spatial transcriptomics of skin in Sweet's syndrome identified positionally distinct immune acting fibroblasts that included a CXCL1+ subset proximal to neutrophils and a CXCL12+ subset distal to the neutrophilic infiltrate. This study defines the cellular landscape of neutrophilic dermatoses and suggests dermal immune acting fibroblasts play a role in the pathogenesis of Sweet's syndrome through recognition of type I interferons.
Keyphrases
  • single molecule
  • case report
  • single cell
  • dendritic cells
  • wound healing
  • extracellular matrix
  • soft tissue
  • induced apoptosis
  • gene expression
  • minimally invasive
  • transcription factor
  • drug induced