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Advances in Dermatology and Allergology/Postępy Dermatologii i Alergologii
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vol. 33
 
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Original paper

Medium dose ultraviolet A1 phototherapy and mRNA expression of interleukin 8, interferon γ, and chemokine receptor 4 in acute skin lesions in atopic dermatitis

Jarosław Bogaczewicz
,
Karolina Malinowska
,
Anna Sysa-Jedrzejowska
,
Anna Wozniacka

Adv Dermatol Allergol 2016; XXXIII (3): 170-175
Online publish date: 2016/06/17
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Introduction

Phototherapy is usually a part of the total treatment plan for the management of patients with atopic dermatitis (AD) [1, 2]. Ultraviolet A1 (UVA1) is effective in managing flares, whereas narrow-band UVB has been recommended for chronic moderate forms of the disease [2]. The therapeutic effectiveness of UVA1 in AD was found to accompany a decrease in the serum level of eosinophil cationic protein, with reductions in the numbers of dermal Langerhans cells and mast cells, as well as relative numbers of intraepidermal IgE+ Langerhans cells, increase in the percentage of dermal CD8+ cells and a reduction in interleukin (IL)-5, IL-13 and IL-31 mRNA expression [3–6]. Twenty years ago, Kimata and Lindley found that plasma IL-8 concentrations decreased as AD improved during treatment [7], and more recently, Kreuter et al. [8] noted a decrease in IL-8 mRNA occurring as a response to UVA1 phototherapy in localized scleroderma. Interleukin-8 is an important mediator of chemotaxis [9]. In a recent study, IL-8 content in the stratum corneum was found to be an indicator of the severity of inflammation in AD lesions [10]. It is now known that a range of cells, including keratinocytes, mast cells and dendritic cells, are capable of secreting IL-8 when exposed to inflammatory stimuli [9, 11–18]. Human keratinocytes were found to express IL-8 after stimulation with heat-killed Staphylococci, suggesting that bacterial load on the skin surface elicits inflammation, which begs the question of whether clinical efficacy of UVA1 irradiation is linked with changes in the expression of IL-8 and other cytokines involved in the pathogenetic pathways of AD, such as chemokine receptor 4 (CCR4), which is important in the recognition of skin vasculature by circulating T cells and in directing lymphocytes [14, 15]. In addition, recent data indicate that skin-infiltrating T cells are capable of producing interferon (IFN)-, especially in the chronic phase of the disease, indicating that pathogenesis of AD is not limited to a type-2 cytokine pattern [16].

Aim

Therefore, the aim of the study was to investigate the expression of IL-8, IFN-, and CCR4 mRNA in specimens of acute skin lesions of patients with AD before and after UVA1 therapy and to identify any correlations which might exist among them. Additionally, the study examines whether UVA1 irradiation influences the expression of these mediators and whether this expression corresponds with the clinical efficacy of UVA1.

Material and methods

Eligibility criteria

The study included a limited number of 25 patients with atopic dermatitis, including 14 males and 11 females, aged 18 to 61, mean 32.4 ±11.54 years. The diagnosis was based on the classification of Hanifin and Rajka [13]. In the clinical assessment of atopic dermatitis, to help minimize the bias, only 1 person performed SCORAD index evaluation, and this evaluator was unaware of the results of the molecular studies [17].
The exclusion criteria were pregnancy, glaucoma, cataract, claustrophobia, photosensitivity, solar urticaria, administration of phototoxic or photoallergic drugs, immunosuppressants, retinoids, glucocorticoids, the use of sunbeds or other artificial UV sources during the previous 6 months and during the study. The study was approved by the local Ethics Committee (RNN/16/14/KE).

UVA1 phototherapy

A Medisun 24000 (Schulze & Bohm GmbH, Germany) was used for medium dose UVA1 phototherapy. The protocol comprised one exposure daily, on Monday-Tuesday-Wednesday-Thursday-Friday, from a starting dose of 10 J/cm2 rising through 20 and 30 on consecutive days to 45 J/cm2. The final dose of 45 J/cm2 was maintained for up to 20 consecutive days of phototherapy. Topical management was limited to the use of emollients. No systemic drugs for atopic dermatitis were administered. Biopsies were taken from acute skin lesions, which were clinically determined when erythema or edema or oozing exceeded one point according to SCORAD index. The first biopsy was taken before phototherapy and the second one within 2 h after the last UVA1 irradiation. Skin samples were frozen at –70°C until assay.

Total RNA extraction

Total RNA was extracted from biopsied skin samples using the RNeasy mini kits (Qiagen), according to the manufacturer’s protocol. In the initial step, a buffer containing -mercaptoethanol was added to Eppendorf tubes containing frozen samples. The samples were then homogenized using a Qiagen homogenizer (Tissue Ruptor) and centrifuged for 3 min at 14000 rpm. RNA was quantified using a PicoDrop spectrophotometer (Picodrop Limited). The quality of RNA samples was analyzed by measuring the absorption ratio at 260/280 nm. The purified total RNA was immediately used for cDNA synthesis or stored at 80°C.

Reverse transcription

cDNA was generated with High Capacity cDNA Reverse Transcription Kits (Applied Biosystems Inc., Foster City, CA), according to the reverse transcription protocols. The starting material comprised 2 µg of DNAse-treated total RNA, to which the following was added: 2× RT master mix containing 2 µl of 10× RT Buffer, 0.8 µl of 25× dNTP Mix (100 mM), 2 µl of 10× RT Random Primers, 1 µl MultiScribe™ Reverse Transcriptase and 1 µl RNase Inhibitor per 20 µl reaction. Reverse transcription was performed in conditions optimized for use with the kit: 25°C for 10 min, 37°C for 120 min, 85°C for 5 min. The samples were kept frozen at 20°C.

mRNA expression

mRNA quantification of selected genes and an endogenous control (actin beta, ACTB) was performed using standard TaqMan® Gene Expression Assays (Applied Biosystems). Hs99999903_m1 was used as endogenous controls, and Hs00174103_m1, Hs00989291_m1, and Hs00747615_s1 for the assessment of IL-8, IFN-, and CCR-4.
Real-time TaqMan qPCR was performed in 96-well optical plates using the HT 7900 Fast Real-Time PCR System (Applied Biosystems) and analyzed using Sequence Detection System 2.3 Software. The results of target genes were represented as Ct, which represents the differences in cycle threshold numbers between the target gene and endogenous control.

Statistical analysis

Statistical analysis was performed using Statistica software, version 10.0 (Statsoft, Poland). Data estimation with the Shapiro-Wilk test did not confirm a Gaussian distribution of the studied parameters. To find correlations, the Spearman correlation coefficient was estimated. Wilcoxon signed-rank test was used to compare two repeated measurements in a sample of atopic dermatitis patients before and after UVA1 phototherapy. Results were displayed as means and standard deviation. In all calculations, p < 0.05 was considered statistically significant.

Results

Correlations before UVA1 irradiation

Before UVA1 phototherapy, mRNA level of CCR-4 correlated with that of IFN- (r = 0.61, p < 0.05) (Figure 1). No significant correlations were found between mRNA level of IL-8 and CCR-4 or between mRNA level of IL-8 and IFN-before UVA1 phototherapy.

Correlations after UVA1 irradiation

After UVA1 phototherapy, mRNA level of CCR-4 correlated with that of IFN- (r = 0.68, p < 0.05) (Figure 2). A significant correlation was found between mRNA level of IL-8 and IFN- (r = 0.57, p < 0.05). After UVA1 phototherapy, mRNA level of CCR-4 correlated also with that of IL-8 (r = 0.54, p < 0.05).

Impact of UVA1 on mRNA expression

UVA1 phototherapy resulted in a significant increase in mRNA expression of IL-8 in comparison to the baseline assessment (6.74 ±3.33 vs. 8.78 ±3.61, p < 0.05, before and after treatment, respectively, p = 0.02) (Figure 3).
After UVA1 phototherapy, no significant difference was found with regard to the mRNA expression of CCR-4 (2.34 ±3.67 vs. 3.34 ±3.922, before and after treatment, respectively) or IFN- (12.7 ±3.75 vs. 13.93 ±3.0, before and after treatment, respectively).

SCORAD index and UVA1 phototherapy

UVA1 phototherapy was associated with a significantly improved SCORAD index (60.16 ±14.71 vs. 30.71 ±14.41 before and after treatment, respectively, p < 0.001) and a significant improvement of the severity of AD (2.68 ±0.47 vs. 1.64 ±0.56 before and after treatment, respectively, p < 0.001) (Figure 4).
SCORAD index and severity of AD were not found to correlate with investigated cytokine mRNA expression, neither before nor after UVA1 phototherapy.

Discussion

The expression of IL-8 mRNA, and the protein itself, by cultured keratinocytes stimulated with Staphylococci [15], indicates that it represents a contributory link in the process of eliciting skin inflammation in response to bacterial colonization or symptomatic skin infection in AD. It is also conceivable that in AD-activated leukocytes in spongiotic or excoriated skin also release IL-8 [10]. Levels of IL-8 in the stratum corneum were found to be associated with the severity of AD, particularly with the degree of erythema, edema/papules and excoriation [10]. These observations prompted this investigation of whether the clinical efficacy of UVA1 is related to a decrease in the expression of IL-8 in acute skin lesions in AD. Although UVA1 irradiation resulted in a significant improvement of SCORAD index as well as severity of AD as expected, it was also found to be accompanied with a greater mRNA expression for IL-8. Therefore, it is likely that the efficacy of UVA1 is attributed to its influence on the expression of a number of different molecules, not only IL-8. In interpreting the results of the present study, it is important to consider indirect effects of UVA1 on many other molecules, via downstream mediators of inflammatory pathways in AD. Hence, the results also take into account the effect of UVA1 on the expression of CCR-4 and IFN- mRNA. CCR4 is a chemokine receptor which is expressed particularly strongly on Th2 lymphocytes, and is involved in the response to macrophage-derived chemokine (MDC) and thymus and activation-regulated chemokine (TARC) [19]. Interestingly, the presence of CCR4(+)CD8(+) T cells predominantly in the CD27(+)CD28(+)CD45RA(–) memory subset was reported [19]. Significant numbers of circulating CCR4(+) memory CD4 lymphocytes were found to express the Th1 cytokine IFN-after stimulation [19]. The present study reveals correlations between mRNA levels of CCR-4, characteristic of Th2 lymphocytes, and IFN-, a Th1 cytokine, in acute skin lesions of patients with AD, both before and after UVA1 phototherapy, which underlines a potential problem in using CCR-4 as a marker of Th2 cells [19]. Instead of the obvious biphasic immune response in AD, with a switch from an initial Th2 response, with predominant IL-4, to a Th1 response with its main production of IFN- in the chronic phase of the disease, patterns of chemokine receptors encountered in vivo can be regulated in a more sophisticated manner [15]. In addition, it seems that interpreting the obtained results as an interplay between Th2 and Th1 cytokine profiles, restricted only to the transition between the initial and the late phase of AD, is an over-simplification. Xiao et al. demonstrate that Th2 and Th1 immune responses are not mutually exclusive and that cofactors, spatial separation, such as epidermis vs. dermis, and cell type in particular, play a role in the initiation and perpetuation of inflammation in AD [20]. In a mouse model, production of TARC, a Th2 chemokine, by Langerhans cells was down-regulated by IFN-, a Th1 cytokine, and up-regulated by tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-and IL-4, aTh2 cytokine [20]. In contrast, HaCaT cells exposed to IL-4, TNF- and IFN- characterized significantly decreased supernatant TARC levels compared to those exposed to both TNF- and IFN- [21]. These results indicate that the cytokine profile can be regulated in different ways depending on cell type, and that the Th2 and Th1 immune responses are not mutually exclusive. Hence, it is also possible that UVA1 irradiation can exert different effects on the expression of cytokines and chemokines in different cell types in the epidermis and dermis in AD. In this regard, our study has several limitations. Firstly, only full skin biopsies containing both epidermis and dermis were investigated. Secondly, mRNA expression was studied in acute skin lesions and compared only with a constitutively expressed house-keeping gene for beta actin. Undoubtedly, a comparison of mRNA expression levels in affected and unaffected skin, together with skin samples from healthy control individuals, would provide more comprehensive data. Thirdly, an investigation of selected molecules additionally at the protein level would also supply more convincing evidence. However, this will have to await future studies. Our intention was to investigate and to confirm, firstly, that IL-8, IFN-, and CCR-4 are expressed, and that secondly, CCR-4 is expressed in parallel with IFN- in acute skin lesions of patients with AD both before and after UVA1 phototherapy. Another key conclusion is the fact that UVA1 significantly improves SCORAD index, lessens the severity of AD and increases the expression of IL-8, with no direct effects on other studied molecules. However, it is likely that UVA1 can influence inflammatory pathways in AD via indirect effects by other mediators. Undoubtedly, the results of RT-PCR are comparable and reproducible, and so further studies conducted on larger populations of patients with AD from different sites are required. This reproducibility may allow future conclusions to be drawn from a more comprehensive evidence base.

Acknowledgments

This study was supported by a grant for scientific purposes (No. 502-03/1-152-01/502-14-255) from the Medical University of Lodz, Poland.

Conflict of interest

The authors declare no conflict of interest.

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