[HTML][HTML] Mechanical and metabolic injury to the skin barrier leads to increased expression of murine β-defensin-1,-3, and-14

K Ahrens, M Schunck, GF Podda, J Meingassner… - Journal of investigative …, 2011 - Elsevier
K Ahrens, M Schunck, GF Podda, J Meingassner, A Stuetz, JM Schröder, J Harder
Journal of investigative dermatology, 2011Elsevier
Protection of the skin against microbiological infection is provided by the permeability barrier
and by antimicrobial proteins. We asked whether the expression of murine β-defensins
(mBDs)-1,-3, and-14—orthologs of human β-defensins hBD-1,-2, and-3, respectively—is
stimulated by mechanically/physicochemically (tape stripping or acetone treatment) or
metabolically (essential fatty acid–deficient (EFAD) diet) induced skin barrier dysfunction.
Both methods led to a moderate induction of mBD-1 and mBD-14 and a pronounced …
Protection of the skin against microbiological infection is provided by the permeability barrier and by antimicrobial proteins. We asked whether the expression of murine β-defensins (mBDs)-1, -3, and -14—orthologs of human β-defensins hBD-1, -2, and -3, respectively—is stimulated by mechanically/physicochemically (tape stripping or acetone treatment) or metabolically (essential fatty acid–deficient (EFAD) diet) induced skin barrier dysfunction. Both methods led to a moderate induction of mBD-1 and mBD-14 and a pronounced induction of mBD-3 mRNA. Protein expression of the mBDs was increased as shown by immunohistology and by western blotting. Artificial barrier repair by occlusion significantly reduced the increased expression of mBD-14 after mechanical injury and of all three mBDs in EFAD mice, supporting an interrelationship between permeability and the antimicrobial barrier. mBD-3 expression was stimulated in vitro by tumor necrosis factor-α (TNF-α), and a neutralizing anti-TNF-α antibody significantly reduced increased mBD-3 expression after barrier injury in mouse skin, indicating that induction of mBD-3 expression is mediated by cytokines. The expression of mBD-14 was stimulated by transforming growth factor-α and not by TNF-α. In summary, we demonstrated upregulation of mBD1, -3, and -14 after mechanically and metabolically induced skin barrier disruption, which may be an attempt to increase defense in the case of permeability barrier dysfunction.
Elsevier