Vitiligo non-responding lesions to narrow band UVB have intriguing cellular and molecular abnormalities that may prevent epidermal repigmentation.
Nathaniel B GoldsteinAndrea SteelLandon TombZachary BerkJunxiao HuVelmurugan BalayaLaura HoaglinKavya GanuthulaMeet PatelErica MbikaWilliam A RobinsonDennis R RoopDavid A NorrisStanca A BirleaPublished in: Pigment cell & melanoma research (2024)
We have discovered that human vitiligo patients treated with narrow-band UVB (NBUVB) demonstrated localized resistance to repigmentation in skin sites characterized by distinct cellular and molecular pathways. Using immunostaining studies, discovery-stage RNA-Seq analysis, and confirmatory in situ hybridization, we analyzed paired biopsies collected from vitiligo lesions that did not repigment after 6 months of NBUVB treatment (non-responding) and compared them with repigmented (responding) lesions from the same patient. Non-responding lesions exhibited acanthotic epidermis, had low number of total, proliferative, and differentiated melanocyte (MC) populations, and increased number of senescent keratinocytes (KCs) and of cytotoxic CD8+ T cells as compared with responding lesions. The abnormal response in the non-responding lesions was driven by a dysregulated cAMP pathway and of upstream activator PDE4B, and of WNT/β-catenin repigmentation pathway. Vitiligo-responding lesions expressed high levels of WNT10B ligand, a molecule that may prevent epidermal senescence induced by NBUVB, and that in cultured melanoblasts prevented the pro-melanogenic effect of α-MSH. Understanding the pathways that govern lack of NBUVB-induced vitiligo repigmentation has a great promise in guiding the development of new therapeutic strategies for vitiligo.