Journal of Inflammation Research (Sep 2024)
Inflammatory Memory in Epidermal Stem Cells - A New Strategy for Recurrent Inflammatory Skin Diseases
Abstract
Qian Gao,1,2 Ping-Sheng Hao1 1Dermatology, Hospital of Chengdu University of Traditional Chinese Medicine, Chengdu, People’s Republic of China; 2Department of Clinical Medicine, Chengdu University of Traditional Chinese Medicine, Chengdu, People’s Republic of ChinaCorrespondence: Ping-Sheng Hao, Email [email protected]: The ability of the skin to “remember” has been a potential mechanism for studying recurrent skin diseases. While it has been thought that the ability to retain past encounters is the prerogative of immune cells, it has recently been discovered that skin tissue stem cells can also take on this task. Epithelial stem cells undergoing inflammation retain their “memory” through epigenetic reprogramming and exhibit rapid epithelialization and epidermal proliferation upon secondary stimulation. This is a non-specific memory modality independent of conventional immune memory, in which histone modifications (acetylation and methylation) and specific transcription factors (AP-1 and STAT3) are involved in the establishment of inflammatory memories, and AIM2/Caspase-1/IL-1β mainly performs the rapid effects of memory. This finding is intriguing for addressing recurrent inflammatory skin diseases, which may explain the fixed-site recurrence of inflammatory skin diseases and develop new therapeutic strategies in the future. However, more research is still needed to decipher the mysteries of memory.Keywords: inflammatory memory, recurrent inflammatory skin diseases, epigenetics, skin tissue stem cells