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Publication : Activation of PPARbeta/delta causes a psoriasis-like skin disease in vivo.

First Author  Romanowska M Year  2010
Journal  PLoS One Volume  5
Issue  3 Pages  e9701
PubMed ID  20300524 Mgi Jnum  J:158907
Mgi Id  MGI:4440791 Doi  10.1371/journal.pone.0009701
Citation  Romanowska M, et al. (2010) Activation of PPARbeta/delta causes a psoriasis-like skin disease in vivo. PLoS One 5(3):e9701
abstractText  BACKGROUND: Psoriasis is one of the most frequent skin diseases world-wide. The disease impacts enormously on affected patients and poses a huge financial burden on health care providers. Several lines of evidence suggest that the nuclear hormone receptor peroxisome proliferator activator (PPAR) beta/delta, known to regulate epithelial differentiation and wound healing, contributes to psoriasis pathogenesis. It is unclear, however, whether activation of PPARbeta/delta is sufficient to trigger psoriasis-like changes in vivo. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Using immunohistochemistry, we define the distribution of PPARbeta/delta in the skin lesions of psoriasis. By expression profiling, we confirm that PPARbeta/delta is overexpressed in the vast majority of psoriasis patients. We further establish a transgenic model allowing inducible activation of PPARbeta/delta in murine epidermis mimicking its distribution in psoriasis lesions. Upon activation of PPARbeta/delta, transgenic mice sustain an inflammatory skin disease strikingly similar to psoriasis, featuring hyperproliferation of keratinocytes, dendritic cell accumulation, and endothelial activation. Development of this phenotype requires the activation of the Th17 subset of T cells, shown previously to be central to psoriasis. Moreover, gene dysregulation in the transgenic mice is highly similar to that in psoriasis. Key transcriptional programs activated in psoriasis, including IL1-related signalling and cholesterol biosynthesis, are replicated in the mouse model, suggesting that PPARbeta/delta regulates these transcriptional changes in psoriasis. Finally, we identify phosphorylation of STAT3 as a novel pathway activated by PPARbeta/delta and show that inhibition of STAT3 phosphorylation blocks disease development. CONCLUSIONS: Activation of PPARbeta/delta in the epidermis is sufficient to trigger inflammatory changes, immune activation, and signalling, and gene dysregulation characteristic of psoriasis.
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