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IFN-κ is critical for normal wound repair and is decreased in diabetic wounds
Sonya J. Wolf, … , J. Michelle Kahlenberg, Katherine A. Gallagher
Sonya J. Wolf, … , J. Michelle Kahlenberg, Katherine A. Gallagher
Published March 31, 2022
Citation Information: JCI Insight. 2022;7(9):e152765. https://doi.org/10.1172/jci.insight.152765.
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Research Article Inflammation

IFN-κ is critical for normal wound repair and is decreased in diabetic wounds

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Abstract

Wound repair following acute injury requires a coordinated inflammatory response. Type I IFN signaling is important for regulating the inflammatory response after skin injury. IFN-κ, a type I IFN, has recently been found to drive skin inflammation in lupus and psoriasis; however, the role of IFN-κ in the context of normal or dysregulated wound healing is unclear. Here, we show that Ifnk expression is upregulated in keratinocytes early after injury and is essential for normal tissue repair. Under diabetic conditions, IFN-κ was decreased in wound keratinocytes, and early inflammation was impaired. Furthermore, we found that the histone methyltransferase mixed-lineage leukemia 1 (MLL1) is upregulated early following injury and regulates Ifnk expression in diabetic wound keratinocytes via an H3K4me3-mediated mechanism. Using a series of in vivo studies with a geneticall y engineered mouse model (Mll1fl/fl K14cre–) and human wound tissues from patients with T2D, we demonstrate that MLL1 controls wound keratinocyte–mediated Ifnk expression and that Mll1 expression is decreased in T2D keratinocytes. Importantly, we found the administration of IFN-κ early following injury improves diabetic tissue repair through increasing early inflammation, collagen deposition, and reepithelialization. These findings have significant implications for understanding the complex role type I IFNs play in keratinocytes in normal and diabetic wound healing. Additionally, they suggest that IFN may be a viable therapeutic target to improve diabetic wound repair.

Authors

Sonya J. Wolf, Christopher O. Audu, Amrita Joshi, Aaron denDekker, William J. Melvin, Frank M. Davis, Xianying Xing, Rachael Wasikowski, Lam C. Tsoi, Steven L. Kunkel, Johann E. Gudjonsson, Mary X. O’Riordan, J. Michelle Kahlenberg, Katherine A. Gallagher

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Figure 5

scRNA-Seq of Mll1 expression is decreased in human T2D wounds.

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scRNA-Seq of Mll1 expression is decreased in human T2D wounds.
(A) Clust...
(A) Cluster analysis was performed using the UMAP technique of single-cell sequencingT2D (n = 1) and nondiabetic wound (n = 2) samples. The black box outlines the keratinocyte populations: basal cells, differentiated cells, keratinized cells. (B) Ridge plot demonstrating expression levels of MLL1 within keratinocytes in human T2D and non-T2D samples. (C) Dot plot demonstrating MLL1 expression within keratinocyte populations in human T2D and non-T2D samples. Dot size corresponds to the proportion of cells within the group expressing MLL1, and dot color corresponds to expression level.

Copyright © 2022 American Society for Clinical Investigation
ISSN 2379-3708

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