Mapping the immune cell landscape of severe atopic dermatitis by single‐cell RNA‐seq

Author:

Jin Seon‐Pil123ORCID,Lee Kyungchun45ORCID,Bang Yoon Ji6,Jeon Yun‐Hui13,Jung Sunyoung6,Choi So‐Jung6,Lee Ji Su13,Kim Junhan45,Guttman‐Yassky Emma7,Park Chung‐Gyu689,Kim Hyun Je68910ORCID,Hong Seunghee45ORCID,Lee Dong Hun123ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Dermatology Seoul National University Hospital Seoul Korea

2. Department of Dermatology Seoul National University College of Medicine Seoul Korea

3. Institute of Human‐Environmental Interface Biology, Medical Research Center Seoul National University Seoul Korea

4. Department of Biochemistry, College of Life Science and Biotechnology Yonsei University Seoul Korea

5. Brain Korea 21 (BK21) FOUR Program, Yonsei Education & Research Center for Biosystems Yonsei University Seoul Korea

6. Department of Biomedical Sciences Seoul National University Graduate School Seoul Korea

7. Department of Dermatology Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai New York USA

8. Department of Microbiology and Immunology Seoul National University College of Medicine Seoul Korea

9. Seoul National University Hospital Seoul Korea

10. Genomic Medicine Institute, Medical Research Center Seoul National University Seoul Korea

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundEfforts to profile atopic dermatitis (AD) tissues have intensified, yet comprehensive analysis of systemic immune landscapes in severe AD remains crucial.MethodsEmploying single‐cell RNA sequencing, we analyzed over 300,000 peripheral blood mononuclear cells from 12 severe AD patients (Eczema area and severity index (EASI) > 21) and six healthy controls.ResultsResults revealed significant immune cell shifts in AD patients, including increased Th2 cell abundance, reduced NK cell clusters with compromised cytotoxicity, and correlated Type 2 innate lymphoid cell proportions with disease severity. Moreover, unique monocyte clusters reflecting activated innate immunity emerged in very severe AD (EASI > 30). While overall dendritic cells (DCs) counts decreased, a distinct Th2‐priming subset termed “Th2_DC” correlated strongly with disease severity, validated across skin tissue data, and flow cytometry with additional independent severe AD samples. Beyond the recognized role of Th2 adaptive immunity, our findings highlight significant innate immune cell alterations in severe AD, implicating their roles in disease pathogenesis and therapeutic potentials.ConclusionApart from the widely recognized role of Th2 adaptive immunity in AD pathogenesis, alterations in innate immune cells and impaired cytotoxic cells have also been observed in severe AD. The impact of these alterations on disease pathogenesis and the effectiveness of potential therapeutic targets requires further investigation.

Funder

National Research Foundation of Korea

Publisher

Wiley

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