Frontiers in Immunology (Nov 2021)

Immune Cell Infiltration Analysis Demonstrates Excessive Mast Cell Activation in Psoriasis

  • Yongjun Zhang,
  • Yanqiang Shi,
  • Jingxia Lin,
  • Xuefei Li,
  • Bin Yang,
  • Jiajian Zhou

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2021.773280
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12

Abstract

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Psoriasis represents multiple inflammatory processes and exaggerated physiological responses to epithelial damage by innate and adaptive immune components, thus it is critical to compare the immune cell niche in disease and healthy skin. Here, we inferred the proportions of different immune cell types in psoriatic and healthy skin using the CIBERSORT algorithm with expression profiles as input. As a result, we observed a dramatic change of immune cell profiles in psoriatic skin compared with healthy skin. Interestingly, the resting mast cells is almost eliminated in psoriatic skin. In contrast, the activated mast cells are enriched in psoriatic skin, indicating that mast cells activation may play an important role in psoriasis pathogenesis. In addition, we found that the proportion of the resting mast cells gradually come back to the normal level in lesioned skin upon etanercept treatment, suggesting that mast cells play a critical role in immune cell niche maintenance. Further experiments validated a significant decrease in mast cell population and an excessive mast cell activation in psoriatic skin compared with healthy skin. In conclusion, our integrative analyses of the immune cell profiles and the corresponding marker genes expression provide a better understanding of the inflammation response in psoriasis and important clues for clinical applications.

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