BIOalternatives has demonstrated with academic partners that OSM and its receptor play an important role in cutaneous inflammatory responses. The results are published in The Journal of Immunology.
Katia Boniface, Caroline Diveu, Franck Morel, Nathalie Pedretti, Josy Froger, Elisa Ravon, Martine Garcia, Emilie Venereau, Laurence Preisser, Emmanuel Guignouard, Gérard Guillet, Guy Dagregorio, Jérôme Pènne, Jean-Pierre Moles, Hans Yssel, Sylvie Chevalier, François-Xavier Bernard, Hugues Gascan and Jean-Claude Lecron
Cutaneous inflammatory diseases such as psoriasis vulgaris and atopic dermatitis are associated with altered keratinocyte function,
as well as with a particular cytokine production profile of skin-infiltrating T lymphocytes. In this study we show that normal
human epidermal keratinocytes express a functional type II oncostatin-M (OSM) receptor (OSMR) consisting of the gp130 and
OSMR-beta components, but not the type I OSMR. The type II OSMR is expressed in skin lesions from both psoriatic patients and
those with atopic dermatitis. Its ligand, OSM, induces via the recruitment of the STAT3 and MAP kinase pathways a gene
expression profile in primary keratinocytes and in a reconstituted epidermis that is characteristic of proinflammatory and innate
immune responses. Moreover, OSM is a potent stimulator of keratinocyte migration in vitro and increases the thickness of a
reconstituted epidermis. OSM transcripts are enhanced in both psoriatic and atopic dermatitic skin as compared with healthy skin
and mirror the enhanced production of OSM by T cells isolated from diseased lesions. Results from a microarray analysis
comparing the gene-modulating effects of OSM with those of 33 different cytokines indicate that OSM is a potent keratinocyte
activator similar to TNF-alpha IL-1, IL-17, and IL-22 and that it acts in synergy with the latter cytokines in the induction of S100A7
and Beta-defensin 2 expression, characteristic of psoriatic skin. Taken together, these results demonstrate that OSM and its receptor
play an important role in cutaneous inflammatory responses in general and that the specific effects of OSM are associated with
distinct inflammatory diseases depending on the cytokine environment.
The Journal of Immunology, 2007, 178: 4615–4622
PMID: 17372020 PubMed - as supplied by publisher
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