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Immunopathogenesis of hidradenitis suppurativa and response to anti–TNF-α therapy
Margaret M. Lowe, … , Scott L. Hansen, Michael D. Rosenblum
Margaret M. Lowe, … , Scott L. Hansen, Michael D. Rosenblum
Published August 25, 2020
Citation Information: JCI Insight. 2020;5(19):e139932. https://doi.org/10.1172/jci.insight.139932.
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Research Article Dermatology Immunology

Immunopathogenesis of hidradenitis suppurativa and response to anti–TNF-α therapy

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Abstract

Hidradenitis suppurativa (HS) is a highly prevalent, morbid inflammatory skin disease with limited treatment options. The major cell types and inflammatory pathways in skin of patients with HS are poorly understood, and which patients will respond to TNF-α blockade is currently unknown. We discovered that clinically and histologically healthy appearing skin (i.e., nonlesional skin) is dysfunctional in patients with HS with a relative loss of immune regulatory pathways. HS skin lesions were characterized by quantitative and qualitative dysfunction of type 2 conventional dendritic cells, relatively reduced regulatory T cells, an influx of memory B cells, and a plasma cell/plasmablast infiltrate predominantly in end-stage fibrotic skin. At the molecular level, there was a relative bias toward the IL-1 pathway and type 1 T cell responses when compared with both healthy skin and psoriatic patient skin. Anti–TNF-α therapy markedly attenuated B cell activation with minimal effect on other inflammatory pathways. Finally, we identified an immune activation signature in skin before anti–TNF-α treatment that correlated with subsequent lack of response to this modality. Our results reveal the fundamental immunopathogenesis of HS and provide a molecular foundation for future studies focused on stratifying patients based on likelihood of clinical response to TNF-α blockade.

Authors

Margaret M. Lowe, Haley B. Naik, Sean Clancy, Mariela Pauli, Kathleen M. Smith, Yingtao Bi, Robert Dunstan, Johann E. Gudjonsson, Maia Paul, Hobart Harris, Esther Kim, Uk Sok Shin, Richard Ahn, Wilson Liao, Scott L. Hansen, Michael D. Rosenblum

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Figure 3

Tissue-infiltrating myeloid cells are dysfunctional in HS skin.

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Tissue-infiltrating myeloid cells are dysfunctional in HS skin.
(A) Unif...
(A) Uniform manifold approximation and projection (UMAP) plots of scRNA-Seq data of myeloid cells sorted from 2 end-stage HS skin donors versus 2 healthy controls. Plots are equally sampled to 2943 cells per sample. Population identification was manually assigned. (B) Percentages of myeloid cell subsets identified in scRNA-Seq data depicted in A. (C) UMAP plots of myeloid cells immunophenotyped by CyTOF. Cells were pregated on live, singlet, CD45+CD3–CD19– events and represent 20,442 cells from 7 healthy donors, 38,820 cells from 5 active inflammatory HS lesions, and 8492 cells from 5 end-stage HS surgical resections. (D) Percentages of myeloid subsets identified via manual gating in 14 healthy donors, 12 biopsies from active HS lesions, and 18 end-stage HS surgically resected specimens. (*P < 0.05, **P < 0.01, ****P < 0.001, 1-way ANOVA.)

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