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Biogeographic and disease-specific alterations in epidermal lipid composition and single-cell analysis of acral keratinocytes
Alexander A. Merleev, … , Johann E. Gudjonsson, Emanual Maverakis
Alexander A. Merleev, … , Johann E. Gudjonsson, Emanual Maverakis
Published July 28, 2022
Citation Information: JCI Insight. 2022;7(16):e159762. https://doi.org/10.1172/jci.insight.159762.
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Resource and Technical Advance Dermatology

Biogeographic and disease-specific alterations in epidermal lipid composition and single-cell analysis of acral keratinocytes

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Abstract

The epidermis is the outermost layer of skin. Here, we used targeted lipid profiling to characterize the biogeographic alterations of human epidermal lipids across 12 anatomically distinct body sites, and we used single-cell RNA-Seq to compare keratinocyte gene expression at acral and nonacral sites. We demonstrate that acral skin has low expression of EOS acyl-ceramides and the genes involved in their synthesis, as well as low expression of genes involved in filaggrin and keratin citrullination (PADI1 and PADI3) and corneodesmosome degradation, changes that are consistent with increased corneocyte retention. Several overarching principles governing epidermal lipid expression were also noted. For example, there was a strong negative correlation between the expression of 18-carbon and 22-carbon sphingoid base ceramides. Disease-specific alterations in epidermal lipid gene expression and their corresponding alterations to the epidermal lipidome were characterized. Lipid biomarkers with diagnostic utility for inflammatory and precancerous conditions were identified, and a 2-analyte diagnostic model of psoriasis was constructed using a step-forward algorithm. Finally, gene coexpression analysis revealed a strong connection between lipid and immune gene expression. This work highlights (a) mechanisms by which the epidermis is uniquely adapted for the specific environmental insults encountered at different body surfaces and (b) how inflammation-associated alterations in gene expression affect the epidermal lipidome.

Authors

Alexander A. Merleev, Stephanie T. Le, Claire Alexanian, Atrin Toussi, Yixuan Xie, Alina I. Marusina, Steven M. Watkins, Forum Patel, Allison C. Billi, Julie Wiedemann, Yoshihiro Izumiya, Ashish Kumar, Ranjitha Uppala, J. Michelle Kahlenberg, Fu-Tong Liu, Iannis E. Adamopoulos, Elizabeth A. Wang, Chelsea Ma, Michelle Y. Cheng, Halani Xiong, Amanda Kirane, Guillaume Luxardi, Bogi Andersen, Lam C. Tsoi, Carlito B. Lebrilla, Johann E. Gudjonsson, Emanual Maverakis

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Figure 7

Acral skin is associated with altered expression of keratin genes.

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Acral skin is associated with altered expression of keratin genes.
(A) U...
(A) UMAP dimensionality reduction plots of single-cell RNA-Seq data. Single-cell RNA-Seq was performed on keratinocytes isolated from paired palm and trunk skin biopsies as described in Figure 6. (B) Basal and granular layer single-cell keratin expression. Each individual data point represents the number of reads that mapped to the indicated gene in a single basal or granular layer keratinocyte. (C) RNA-Seq was performed on whole-skin biopsies obtained from palm and trunk. Box-and-whisker plots of representative keratin genes differentially expressed in palm skin are shown. (D) Box-and-whisker plot of KRT9 and KRT10 expression in palm skin. Scatter plot of KRT9 versus KRT1 expression in individual granular layer palm keratinocytes. Each dot represents a single granular layer keratinocyte. Note the strong correlation between KRT1 and KRT9 within each cell. (E) Correlation scatter plot of KRT15 and KRT78 in cultured keratinocytes, where each data point represents a different primary keratinocyte culture.

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ISSN 2379-3708

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