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Publication : Interferon lambda restricts herpes simplex virus skin disease by suppressing neutrophil-mediated pathology.

First Author  Philip DT Year  2024
Journal  mBio Volume  15
Issue  4 Pages  e0262323
PubMed ID  38426749 Mgi Jnum  J:361379
Mgi Id  MGI:7620881 Doi  10.1128/mbio.02623-23
Citation  Philip DT, et al. (2024) Interferon lambda restricts herpes simplex virus skin disease by suppressing neutrophil-mediated pathology. mBio 15(4):e0262323
abstractText  Type III interferons (IFN-lambda) are antiviral and immunomodulatory cytokines that have been best characterized in respiratory and gastrointestinal infections, but the effects of IFN-lambda against skin infections have not been extensively investigated. We sought to define the skin-specific effects of IFN-lambda against the highly prevalent human pathogen, herpes simplex virus (HSV). We infected mice lacking the IFN-lambda receptor (Ifnlr1(-/-)), both the IFN-lambda and the IFN-alpha/beta receptors (Ifnar1(-/-)Ifnlr1(-/-)), or IFN-lambda cytokines (Ifnl2/3(-/-)) and found that IFN-lambda restricts the severity of HSV-1 and HSV-2 skin lesions without affecting viral loads. We used RNAseq to define IFN-lambda- and IFN-beta-induced transcriptional responses in primary mouse keratinocytes. Using conditional knockout mice, we found that IFN-lambda signaling in both keratinocytes and neutrophils was necessary to control HSV-1 skin lesion severity and that IFN-lambda signaling in keratinocytes suppressed CXCL9-mediated neutrophil recruitment to the skin. Furthermore, depleting neutrophils or blocking CXCL9 protected against severe HSV-1 skin lesions in Ifnlr1(-/-) mice. Altogether, our results suggest that IFN-lambda plays an immunomodulatory role in the skin that restricts neutrophil-mediated pathology during HSV infection and suggests potential applications for IFN-lambda in treating viral skin infections.IMPORTANCEType III interferons (IFN-lambda) have been shown to have antiviral and immunomodulatory effects at epithelial barriers such as the respiratory and gastrointestinal tracts, but their effects on the skin have not been extensively investigated. We used mice lacking IFN-lambda signaling to investigate the skin-specific effects of IFN-lambda against the herpes simplex virus (HSV), which targets epithelial tissues to cause cold sores and genital herpes. We found that IFN-lambda limited the severity of HSV skin lesions without affecting viral load and that this protective effect required IFN-lambda signaling in both keratinocytes and neutrophils. We found that IFN-lambda signaling in keratinocytes suppressed neutrophil recruitment to the skin and that depleting neutrophils protected against severe HSV skin lesions in the absence of IFN-lambda. Altogether, our results suggest that IFN-lambda plays an immunomodulatory role in the skin that restricts neutrophil-mediated pathology during HSV infection and suggests potential applications for IFN-lambda in treating viral skin infections.
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