ADAMDEC1 promotes skin inflammation in rosacea via modulating the polarization of M1 macrophages.
Liu. Tangxiele T; Deng. Zhili Z; Xie. Hongfu H; Chen. Mengting M; Xu. San S; Peng. Qinqin Q; Sha. Ke K; Xiao. Wenqin W; Zhao. Zhixiang Z; Li. Ji J
Key Findings
- ADAMDEC1 levels are markedly increased in rosacea lesions and in mouse skin after LL‑37 treatment.
- ADAMDEC1 is mainly produced by M1 (pro‑inflammatory) macrophages, not M2 (anti‑inflammatory) ones.
- Silencing ADAMDEC1 reduces M1 markers (IL‑6, iNOS, TNF‑α) and lessens rosacea‑like skin inflammation.
Practical Outcomes
- For DIY skin‑health protocols that use LL‑37 (e.g., topical sprays or creams), this work suggests a risk of triggering ADAMDEC1‑driven inflammation, especially in people prone to rosacea. Moderating LL‑37 dose or avoiding it on inflamed skin may help prevent unwanted flare‑ups.
Summary
The study found that the skin‑irritating peptide LL‑37 triggers higher levels of a protein called ADAMDEC1, which pushes immune cells (macrophages) toward a pro‑inflammatory M1 state and worsens rosacea‑like skin inflammation in mice and humans.
Abstract
Rosacea is a chronic inflammatory cutaneous disease which mainly affects central face, leading to cosmetic disfigurement and compromised social psychology in billions of rosacea patients. Though the exact etiology of rosacea remains elusive, accumulating evidence has highlighted the dysfunction of innate immunity and inflammation in rosacea pathogenesis. Disintegrin Metalloprotease ADAM-like Decysin-1 (ADAMDEC1) is an orphan ADAM-like metalloprotease which is believed to be closely related to inflammation. Here for the first time, we reported that Adamdec1 expression was significantly increased in the skin lesions of rosacea patients and LL37-induced rosacea-like mouse models. Immunofluorescence analysis revealed co-localization of ADAMDEC1 and macrophages in patient and mouse biopsies. In cellular experiment, the expression of ADAMDEC1 was prominently elevated in M1 but not M2 macrophages. Knocking down of ADAMDEC1 significantly blunted M1 polarization in macrophages induced from human monocytes and THP-1 cell lines. Furthermore, silencing of Adamdec1 in LL-37-induced mouse model also suppressed the expression of M1 signature genes such as IL-6, iNOS and TNF-α, resulting in attenuated rosacea-like phenotype and inflammation. Taken together, our results demonstrate that ADAMDEC1 plays a pro-inflammatory role in rosacea via modulating the M1 polarization of macrophages.
Study Information
pubmed
2019
2019-10-16T00:00:00.000Z
10.1016/j.bbrc.2019.10.073
42
31