First Author | Harris TA | Year | 2019 |
Journal | Cell Host Microbe | PubMed ID | 31101494 |
Mgi Jnum | J:274749 | Mgi Id | MGI:6304390 |
Doi | 10.1016/j.chom.2019.04.004 | Citation | Harris TA, et al. (2019) Resistin-like Molecule alpha Provides Vitamin-A-Dependent Antimicrobial Protection in the Skin. Cell Host Microbe |
abstractText | Vitamin A deficiency increases susceptibility to skin infection. However, the mechanisms by which vitamin A regulates skin immunity remain unclear. Here, we show that resistin-like molecule alpha (RELMalpha), a small secreted cysteine-rich protein, is expressed by epidermal keratinocytes and sebocytes and serves as an antimicrobial protein that is required for vitamin-A-dependent resistance to skin infection. RELMalpha was induced by microbiota colonization of the murine skin, was bactericidal in vitro, and was protected against bacterial infection of the skin in vivo. RELMalpha expression required dietary vitamin A and was induced by the therapeutic vitamin A analog isotretinoin, which protected against skin infection in a RELMalpha-dependent manner. The RELM family member Resistin was expressed in human skin, was induced by vitamin A analogs, and killed skin bacteria, indicating a conserved function for RELM proteins in skin innate immunity. Our findings provide insight into how vitamin A promotes resistance to skin infection. |