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Propionibacterium acnes–induced immunopathology correlates with health and disease association
Stacey L. Kolar, … , Huiying Li, George Y. Liu
Stacey L. Kolar, … , Huiying Li, George Y. Liu
Published March 7, 2019
Citation Information: JCI Insight. 2019;4(5):e124687. https://doi.org/10.1172/jci.insight.124687.
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Research Article Dermatology Microbiology

Propionibacterium acnes–induced immunopathology correlates with health and disease association

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Abstract

Genomic studies revealed the existence of health- and acne-associated P. acnes strains and suggested novel approaches for broadening understanding of acne vulgaris. However, clinical association of P. acnes with disease or health has yet to be corroborated experimentally. Current animal models of acne do not closely mimic human disease and have unclear translational value. We have developed a murine model of acne by combining P. acnes inoculation with topical application of a synthetic human sebum. We showed that human sebum promoted persistence of intradermally injected P. acnes with little loss of viability after 1 week and permitted use of more physiologic inoculums. Application of acne-associated P. acnes RT4/5 strains led to development of moderate to severe skin pathology compared with application of health-associated type II P. acnes strains (RT2/6). RT4/5 P. acnes strains uniformly induced higher levels of KC (IL-8), IL-1α, IL-1β, and IL-6 in vitro and in vivo compared with type II P. acnes strains. Overall, our data provide immunopathologic corroboration of health and disease association of clinical P. acnes strains and inform on a platform to query putative virulence factors uncovered by genomic studies.

Authors

Stacey L. Kolar, Chih-Ming Tsai, Juan Torres, Xuemo Fan, Huiying Li, George Y. Liu

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Figure 1

Sebum application enhances P.

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Sebum application enhances P.

acnessurvival in a murine model of acne i...
acnessurvival in a murine model of acne immunopathology.P. acnes strain HL043PA1 (RT5, 107 CFU) was washed and resuspended in PBS or media prior to intradermal injection, with or without daily topical application of sebum (20 μl). (A) P. acnes recovery from skin lesions over 7 days. (B) Lesion sizes over 7 days and representative lesions on day 7. (C) Representative lesions induced with sebum alone, P. acnes alone, or both sebum and P. acnes. (D) Cytokines measured from skin homogenates, determined by ELISA. Data are shown as mean ± SEM, n = 5 mice per group for A, B, and D. Data in A and B were analyzed by ANOVA and showed significance at P < 0.01 at day 1, 3, and 7 between groups. Data in D were analyzed using Mann-Whitney. **P < 0.001.

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