RNase 7 Strongly Promotes TLR9-Mediated DNA Sensing by Human Plasmacytoid Dendritic Cells.
Kopfnagel. Verena V; Wagenknecht. Sylvia S; Harder. Jürgen J; Hofmann. Karsten K; Kleine. Michael M; Buch. Anna A; Sodeik. Beate B; Werfel. Thomas T
Key Findings
- RNaseāÆ7 enables plasmacytoid dendritic cells to sense selfāDNA and bacterial DNA quickly.
- This sensing triggers a robust IFNāα response, stronger than that caused by other antimicrobial peptides.
- The IFN response driven by RNaseāÆ7 helps protect skin cells from herpes simplex virus 1 infection.
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers, the finding suggests that enhancing RNaseāÆ7 activity in the skin could boost innate antiviral defenses. While no direct supplement or dosage is provided, strategies that naturally raise RNaseāÆ7 levels (e.g., maintaining healthy skin barrier, vitamin D optimization) might be worth exploring for better skin immunity.
Summary
The study shows that RNaseāÆ7, a natural skin protein, helps immune cells in the skin spot DNA from our own cells and from bacteria much faster, leading to a strong antiviral signal that can block herpes virus infection. It works better than other similar skin peptides like LLā37.
Abstract
Plasmacytoid dendritic cells (pDCs) were described to accumulate in the skin of patients with psoriasis and to be recruited into the dermis upon allergen challenge in atopic dermatitis. Activation of pDCs in the skin has been identified as an important initiator of psoriasis development. Ribonuclease (RNase) 7 is one of the major antimicrobial peptides secreted by keratinocytes and is expressed in significantly higher amounts in lesional skin of patients with atopic dermatitis or psoriasis than in healthy individuals. The skin-derived antimicrobial peptides human ß-defensin 2 and LL-37 indirectly stimulate the activity of skin pDCs, but to our knowledge, an immunomodulatory potential of RNase 7 has not yet been reported. We show here that RNase 7 enables human pDCs to recognize self-DNA and promotes their rapid sensing of bacterial DNA. This very fast innate immune response was sufficient to up-regulate the expression of several antiviral IFN-stimulated genes in human peripheral blood mononuclear cells and to inhibit an infection of primary human keratinocytes with herpes simplex virus 1. RNase 7 was a markedly stronger trigger for IFN-α expression in human pDCs than the other antimicrobial peptides. Our data indicate that RNase 7 exhibits potent immunomodulatory functions and supports the efficient recognition of microbial infections by human skin-infiltrating pDCs.
Study Information
pubmed
2017
2017-11-20T00:00:00.000Z
10.1016/j.jid.2017.09.052
49
63