Cytosolic DNA triggers inflammasome activation in keratinocytes in psoriatic lesions.
Dombrowski. Yvonne Y; Peric. Mark M; Koglin. Sarah S; Kammerbauer. Claudia C; Göss. Christine C; Anz. David D; Simanski. Maren M; Gläser. Regine R; Harder. Jürgen J; Hornung. Veit V; Gallo. Richard L RL; Ruzicka. Thomas T; Besch. Robert R; Schauber. Jürgen J
Key Findings
- Psoriatic skin lesions contain lots of cytosolic DNA and higher levels of the DNA sensor AIM2 in keratinocytes.
- When DNA is present inside keratinocytes, it activates the AIM2 inflammasome and causes IL‑1β release.
- LL‑37 binds to the cytosolic DNA, neutralizes it, and blocks AIM2 inflammasome activation, reducing IL‑1β production.
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers, the main takeaway is that LL‑37 has a natural anti‑inflammatory role in skin by dampening DNA‑driven immune activation. While the study doesn’t provide dosing or delivery methods, it hints that boosting LL‑37 (e.g., via topical formulations or peptide supplements) could be explored for skin health or broader inflammation control, though more research is needed before practical protocols can be recommended.
Summary
The study shows that the natural skin peptide LL‑37 can bind to stray DNA inside skin cells and stop a inflammation‑triggering complex called the AIM2 inflammasome, which reduces the release of the inflammatory signal IL‑1β. This anti‑inflammatory effect was seen in psoriasis lesions, suggesting LL‑37 might help calm skin inflammation by neutralizing DNA that would otherwise spark an immune response.
Abstract
The proinflammatory cytokine interleukin-1β (IL-1β) plays a central role in the pathogenesis and the course of inflammatory skin diseases, including psoriasis. Posttranscriptional activation of IL-1β is mediated by inflammasomes; however, the mechanisms triggering IL-1β processing remain unknown. Recently, cytosolic DNA has been identified as a danger signal that activates inflammasomes containing the DNA sensor AIM2. In this study, we detected abundant cytosolic DNA and increased AIM2 expression in keratinocytes in psoriatic lesions but not in healthy skin. In cultured keratinocytes, interferon-γ induced AIM2, and cytosolic DNA triggered the release of IL-1β via the AIM2 inflammasome. Moreover, the antimicrobial cathelicidin peptide LL-37, which can interact with DNA in psoriatic skin, neutralized cytosolic DNA in keratinocytes and blocked AIM2 inflammasome activation. Together, these data suggest that cytosolic DNA is an important disease-associated molecular pattern that can trigger AIM2 inflammasome and IL-1β activation in psoriasis. Furthermore, cathelicidin LL-37 interfered with DNA-sensing inflammasomes, which thereby suggests an anti-inflammatory function for this peptide. Thus, our data reveal a link between the AIM2 inflammasome, cathelicidin LL-37, and autoinflammation in psoriasis, providing new potential targets for the treatment of this chronic skin disease.
Study Information
pubmed
2011
2011-05-11T00:00:00.000Z
10.1126/scitranslmed.3002001
424
35