PeerJ (Sep 2023)

TLR7 promotes skin inflammation via activating NFκB-mTORC1 axis in rosacea

  • Yaqun Huang,
  • Da Liu,
  • Mengting Chen,
  • San Xu,
  • Qinqin Peng,
  • Yan Zhu,
  • Juan Long,
  • Tangxiele Liu,
  • Zhili Deng,
  • Hongfu Xie,
  • Ji Li,
  • Fangfen Liu,
  • Wenqin Xiao

DOI
https://doi.org/10.7717/peerj.15976
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11
p. e15976

Abstract

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Rosacea is a chronic inflammatory skin disease originated from damaged skin barrier and innate/adaptive immune dysregulation. Toll-like receptors (TLRs) sense injured skin and initiate downstream inflammatory and immune responses, whose role in rosacea is not fully understood. Here, via RNA-sequencing analysis, we found that the TLR signaling pathway is the top-ranked signaling pathway enriched in rosacea skin lesions, in which TLR7 is highlighted and positively correlated with the inflammation severity of disease. In LL37-induced rosacea-like mouse models, silencing TLR7 prevented the development of rosacea-like skin inflammation. Specifically, we demonstrated that overexpressing TLR7 in keratinocytes stimulates rapamycin-sensitive mTOR complex 1 (mTORC1) pathway via NFκB signaling. Ultimately, TLR7/NFκ B/mTORC1 axis promotes the production of cytokines and chemokines, leading to the migration of CD4+T cells, which are infiltrated in the lesional skin of rosacea. Our report reveals the crucial role of TLR7 in rosacea pathogenesis and indicatesa promising candidate for rosacea treatments.

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