International Journal of Molecular Sciences (May 2022)

Profiling the Atopic Dermatitis Epidermal Transcriptome by Tape Stripping and BRB-seq

  • Tu Hu,
  • Tanja Todberg,
  • Daniel Andersen,
  • Niels Banhos Danneskiold-Samsøe,
  • Sofie Boesgaard Neestrup Hansen,
  • Karsten Kristiansen,
  • David Adrian Ewald,
  • Susanne Brix,
  • Joel Correa da Rosa,
  • Ilka Hoof,
  • Lone Skov,
  • Thomas Litman

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms23116140
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 23, no. 11
p. 6140

Abstract

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Tape stripping is a non-invasive skin sampling technique, which has recently gained use for the study of the transcriptome of atopic dermatitis (AD), a common inflammatory skin disorder characterized by a defective epidermal barrier and perturbated immune response. Here, we performed BRB-seq—a low cost, multiplex-based, transcriptomic profiling technique—on tape-stripped skin from 30 AD patients and 30 healthy controls to evaluate the methods’ ability to assess the epidermal AD transcriptome. An AD signature consisting of 91 differentially expressed genes, specific for skin barrier and inflammatory response, was identified. The gene expression in the outermost layers, stratum corneum and stratum granulosum, of the skin showed highest correlation between tape-stripped skin and matched full-thickness punch biopsies. However, we observed that low and highly variable transcript counts, probably due to low RNA yield and RNA degradation in the tape-stripped skin samples, were a limiting factor for epidermal transcriptome profiling as compared to punch biopsies. We conclude that deep BRB-seq of tape-stripped skin is needed to counteract large between-sample RNA yield variation and highly zero-inflated data in order to apply this protocol for population-wide screening of the epidermal transcriptome in inflammatory skin diseases.

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