Involvement of ILC1-like innate lymphocytes in human autoimmunity, lessons from alopecia areata

Author:

Laufer Britva Rimma12,Keren Aviad1,Bertolini Marta3,Ullmann Yehuda4,Paus Ralf356,Gilhar Amos1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Skin Research Laboratory, Rappaport Faculty of Medicine, Technion – Israel Institute of Technology

2. Department of Dermatology, Rambam Health Care Campus

3. Monasterium Laboratory

4. Department of Plastic Surgery, Rambam Medical Center

5. Dr. Phillip Frost Department of Dermatology & Cutaneous Surgery, Miller School of Medicine, University of Miami

6. CUTANEON

Abstract

Here, we have explored the involvement of innate lymphoid cells-type 1 (ILC1) in the pathogenesis of alopecia areata (AA), because we found them to be significantly increased around lesional and non-lesional HFs of AA patients. To further explore these unexpected findings, we first co-cultured autologous circulating ILC1-like cells (ILC1lc) with healthy, but stressed, organ-cultured human scalp hair follicles (HFs). ILClc induced all hallmarks of AA ex vivo: they significantly promoted premature, apoptosis-driven HF regression (catagen), HF cytotoxicity/dystrophy, and most important for AA pathogenesis, the collapse of the HFs physiological immune privilege. NKG2D-blocking or IFNγ-neutralizing antibodies antagonized this. In vivo, intradermal injection of autologous activated, NKG2D+/IFNγ-secreting ILC1lc into healthy human scalp skin xenotransplanted onto SCID/beige mice sufficed to rapidly induce characteristic AA lesions. This provides the first evidence that ILC1lc, which are positive for the ILC1 phenotype and negative for the classical NK markers, suffice to induce AA in previously healthy human HFs ex vivo and in vivo, and further questions the conventional wisdom that AA is always an autoantigen-dependent, CD8 +T cell-driven autoimmune disease.

Funder

Technion research and development foundation

Frost Endowed Scholarship from the university of Miami

Publisher

eLife Sciences Publications, Ltd

Subject

General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine,General Neuroscience

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