Intestinal inflammation alters the antigen-specific immune response to a skin commensal.

  • Merana, Geil R
  • Dwyer, Laura R
  • Dhariwala, Miqdad O
  • Weckel, Antonin
  • Gonzalez, Jeanmarie R
  • Okoro, Joy N
  • Cohen, Jarish N
  • Tamaki, Courtney M
  • Han, Jungmin
  • Tasoff, Preston
  • Palacios-Calderon, Yasmin
  • Ha, Connie WY
  • Lynch, Susan V
  • Segre, Julia A
  • Kong, Heidi H
  • Kattah, Michael G
  • Ma, Averil
  • Scharschmidt, Tiffany C
Publication date
May 2022
Publisher
eScholarship, University of California

Abstract

Resident microbes in skin and gut predominantly impact local immune cell function during homeostasis. However, colitis-associated neutrophilic skin disorders suggest possible breakdown of this compartmentalization with disease. Using a model wherein neonatal skin colonization by Staphylococcus epidermidis facilitates generation of commensal-specific tolerance and CD4+ regulatory T cells (Tregs), we ask whether this response is perturbed by gut inflammation. Chemically induced colitis is accompanied by intestinal expansion of S. epidermidis and reduces gut-draining lymph node (dLN) commensal-specific Tregs. It also results in reduced commensal-specific Tregs in skin and skin-dLNs and increased skin neutrophils. Increased CD4+ circu...

Extracted data

We use cookies to provide a better user experience.