Abstract

Ethnopharmacological relevancePsoriasis is a complex recurrent inflammatory skin disease with different pathological changes in different stages. Psoriasis in its active stage, which is comparable to the blood-heat type in traditional Chinese medicine (TCM), has been treated by Liangxue Jiedu Decoction (LJD) in TCM for decades, with proven efficacy. According to TCM theories, LJD has the function of removing heat and pathogenic factors from the blood. Aim of the studyWe aimed to investigate the molecular features associated with the active stage psoriasis and identify genes responding to LJD treatment accompanied by lesion remission. Materials and methodsHealthy volunteers and psoriasis patients who met specific diagnostic criteria were recruited. Twenty-six transcriptomes were profiled from the peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) of 10 psoriasis patients (pre- and post-treatment) and 6 healthy volunteers. RNA sequencing data were analyzed using an integrated approach combining differential gene expression analysis (DGEA) and weighted gene co-expression network analysis (WGCNA), by which gene expression was linked to multiple clinical traits, including psoriasis area and severity index (PASI), as well as the improvement rate of skin lesions (ΔPASI). The actions of LJD were then verified using an in vitro cell assay coupled to flow cytometric analysis and RT-PCR. ResultsWe identified four network modules with statistical significance (P < 0.05), two of which connected to the PASI score, while the other two connected to 8-week treatment and ΔPASI, respectively. In psoriasis patients, activated inflammatory pathways and inhibited G-protein signaling genes (GTPase IMAP family member and G protein-coupled receptor) co-occurred, with high expression of CD83 and CD69, and low expression of CD160 and CD180, compared with the health. Accompanying LJD treatment and lesion remission, the expression of CD69 and cell cycle-related genes, including CCNA2, CCNB2, CDK1, and TOP2A, was down-regulated. The inhibitory role of LJD on CD69 expression was confirmed by the decline of activating naïve CD4+ T lymphocytes. ConclusionOur study suggests that active psoriasis is characterized by unbalanced immune status with dendrite cell and lymphocyte-associated inflammatory activation as well as NK cell- and B cell-associated defense response aberrance. LJD played an inhibitory role in T cell activation, a process located downstream pathological cascade of psoriasis.

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