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Distinct T cell signatures are associated with Staphylococcus aureus skin infection in pediatric atopic dermatitis
Julianne Clowry, … , Alan D. Irvine, Rachel M. McLoughlin
Julianne Clowry, … , Alan D. Irvine, Rachel M. McLoughlin
Published May 8, 2024
Citation Information: JCI Insight. 2024;9(9):e178789. https://doi.org/10.1172/jci.insight.178789.
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Research Article Dermatology Immunology

Distinct T cell signatures are associated with Staphylococcus aureus skin infection in pediatric atopic dermatitis

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Abstract

Atopic dermatitis (AD) is an inflammatory skin condition with a childhood prevalence of up to 25%. Microbial dysbiosis is characteristic of AD, with Staphylococcus aureus the most frequent pathogen associated with disease flares and increasingly implicated in disease pathogenesis. Therapeutics to mitigate the effects of S. aureus have had limited efficacy and S. aureus–associated temporal disease flares are synonymous with AD. An alternative approach is an anti–S. aureus vaccine, tailored to AD. Experimental vaccines have highlighted the importance of T cells in conferring protective anti–S. aureus responses; however, correlates of T cell immunity against S. aureus in AD have not been identified. We identify a systemic and cutaneous immunological signature associated with S. aureus skin infection (ADS.aureus) in a pediatric AD cohort, using a combined Bayesian multinomial analysis. ADS.aureus was most highly associated with elevated cutaneous chemokines IP10 and TARC, which preferentially direct Th1 and Th2 cells to skin. Systemic CD4+ and CD8+ T cells, except for Th2 cells, were suppressed in ADS.aureus, particularly circulating Th1, memory IL-10+ T cells, and skin-homing memory Th17 cells. Systemic γδ T cell expansion in ADS.aureus was also observed. This study suggests that augmentation of protective T cell subsets is a potential therapeutic strategy in the management of S. aureus in AD.

Authors

Julianne Clowry, Daniel J. Dempsey, Tracey J. Claxton, Aisling M. Towell, Mary B. Turley, Martin Sutton, Joan A. Geoghegan, Sanja Kezic, Ivone Jakasa, Arthur White, Alan D. Irvine, Rachel M. McLoughlin

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Figure 6

Features expanded and suppressed in ADS.aureus.

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Features expanded and suppressed in ADS.aureus.
Venn diagrams outline th...
Venn diagrams outline the features expanded (A) and suppressed (B) in ADS.aureus in the Bayesian multinomial models. The blue circle represents the analysis of systemic immune profiles only, the yellow circle represents the combined skin and systemic immune profiling, and the gray circle represents the combined skin and systemic immune profiling adjusted for systemic immunosuppressive treatments of AD. For systemic immune profiling there were a total of n = 93 patients, with n = 12 in the ADS.aureus group. For combined skin and systemic immune profiling and combined skin and systemic immune profiling adjusted for systemic immunosuppressive treatments, there were a total of n = 69 patients, with n = 9 in the ADS.aureus group. Absence of a prefix indicates subtype is a circulating T cell. CLA, cutaneous lymphocyte-associated antigen; Memory, S. aureus antigen–specific memory responses; TS, tape strip.

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