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Lupus dermal fibroblasts are proinflammatory and exhibit a profibrotic phenotype in scarring skin disease
Suzanne K. Shoffner-Beck, Lisa Abernathy-Close, Stephanie Lazar, Feiyang Ma, Mehrnaz Gharaee-Kermani, Amy Hurst, Craig Dobry, Deepika Pandian, Rachael Wasikowski, Amanda Victory, Kelly Arnold, Johann E. Gudjonsson, Lam C. Tsoi, J. Michelle Kahlenberg
Suzanne K. Shoffner-Beck, Lisa Abernathy-Close, Stephanie Lazar, Feiyang Ma, Mehrnaz Gharaee-Kermani, Amy Hurst, Craig Dobry, Deepika Pandian, Rachael Wasikowski, Amanda Victory, Kelly Arnold, Johann E. Gudjonsson, Lam C. Tsoi, J. Michelle Kahlenberg
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Research Article Dermatology

Lupus dermal fibroblasts are proinflammatory and exhibit a profibrotic phenotype in scarring skin disease

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Abstract

Fibroblasts are stromal cells known to regulate local immune responses important for wound healing and scar formation; however, the cellular mechanisms driving damage and scarring in patients with cutaneous lupus erythematosus (CLE) remain poorly understood. Dermal fibroblasts in patients with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) experience increased cytokine signaling in vivo, but the effect of inflammatory mediators on fibroblast responses in nonscarring versus scarring CLE subtypes is unclear. Here, we examined responses to cytokines in dermal fibroblasts from nonlesional skin of 22 patients with SLE and CLE and 34 individuals acting as healthy controls. Notably, inflammatory cytokine responses were exaggerated in SLE fibroblasts compared with those from individuals acting as healthy controls. In lesional CLE biopsies, these same inflammatory profiles were reflected in single-cell RNA-Seq of SFRP2+ and inflammatory fibroblast subsets, and TGF-β was identified as a critical upstream regulator for inflammatory fibroblasts in scarring discoid lupus lesions. In vitro cytokine stimulation of nonlesional fibroblasts from patients who scar from CLE identified an upregulation of collagens, particularly in response to TGF-β, whereas inflammatory pathways were more prominent in nonscarring patients. Our study revealed that SLE fibroblasts are poised to hyperrespond to inflammation, with differential responses among patients with scarring versus nonscarring disease, providing a potential skin-specific target for mitigating damage.

Authors

Suzanne K. Shoffner-Beck, Lisa Abernathy-Close, Stephanie Lazar, Feiyang Ma, Mehrnaz Gharaee-Kermani, Amy Hurst, Craig Dobry, Deepika Pandian, Rachael Wasikowski, Amanda Victory, Kelly Arnold, Johann E. Gudjonsson, Lam C. Tsoi, J. Michelle Kahlenberg

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Figure 3

Cutaneous lupus lesional skin single-cell module scores and upstream regulators of dermal fibroblasts from patients with DLE (scarring disease) or SCLE (nonscarring disease).

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Cutaneous lupus lesional skin single-cell module scores and upstream reg...
(A) Bar plots showing breakdown of samples by sample type (healthy, nonlesional lupus, and lesional lupus) and by disease type (SCLE and DLE). UMAP showing fibroblast clusters based on cell origin and disease type, including healthy control skin (H), nonlesional lupus skin (NLE), or lesional lupus skin (LLE) and by fibroblast cell subtype. (B) Module scores calculated using inflammatory profiles from control/lupus analysis of dermal fibroblasts. Significance level is denoted by asterisks (*P < 0.05, **P < 0.01, ***P < 0.001, ****P < 0.0001). (C and D) Top 25 upstream regulators plotted with the number of genes represented by dot size and colored by log(P value) for (C) the SFRP2+ fibroblast subtype and (D) the inflammatory fibroblast subtype.

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