Cell Reports (Nov 2023)

Keratinocyte FABP5-VCP complex mediates recruitment of neutrophils in psoriasis

  • Jiaqing Hao,
  • Jianyu Yu,
  • Matthew S. Yorek,
  • Chi-Li Yu,
  • R. Marshall Pope,
  • Michael S. Chimenti,
  • Yiqin Xiong,
  • Aloysius Klingelhutz,
  • Ali Jabbari,
  • Bing Li

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 42, no. 11
p. 113449

Abstract

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Summary: One of the hallmarks of intractable psoriasis is neutrophil infiltration in skin lesions. However, detailed molecular mechanisms of neutrophil chemotaxis and activation remain unclear. Here, we demonstrate a significant upregulation of epidermal fatty acid binding protein (E-FABP, FABP5) in the skin of human psoriasis and psoriatic mouse models. Genetic deletion of FABP5 in mice by global knockout and keratinocyte conditional (Krt6a-Cre) knockout, but not myeloid cell conditional (LysM-Cre) knockout, attenuates psoriatic symptoms. Immunophenotypic analysis shows that FABP5 deficiency specifically reduces skin recruitment of Ly6G+ neutrophils. Mechanistically, activated keratinocytes produce chemokines and cytokines that trigger neutrophil chemotaxis and activation in an FABP5-dependent manner. Proteomic analysis further identifies that FABP5 interacts with valosin-containing protein (VCP), a key player in NF-κB signaling activation. Silencing of FABP5, VCP, or both inhibits NF-κB/neutrophil chemotaxis signaling. Collectively, these data demonstrate dysregulated FABP5 as a molecular mechanism promoting NF-κB signaling and neutrophil infiltration in psoriasis pathogenesis.

Keywords