Abstract

Patients with graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) develop characteristic mucocutaneous phenomena consisting of erosive erythema with histopathological findings including interface dermatitis and keratinocyte (KC) death, resulting in widespread sclerodermatous changes. We found that KCs exhibit marked production of TGFβ1 in skin lesions of chronic GVHD but not in those of acute GVHD. To further investigate the roles of KCs, the main targets of donor T cells, in sclerodermatous changes followed by interface dermatitis, we established a murine model of chronic GVHD-like sclerodermatous changes followed by acute GVHD-like mucocutaneous injury in genetically modified mice transferred with KC-specific CD8 T cells. Although transfer of granzyme B-deficient CD8 T cells did not result in either mucocutaneous injury or sclerodermatous changes in recipients, IFN-γ-deficient CD8 T-cell recipients developed severe acute mucocutaneous injury but milder sclerodermatous changes than wild-type CD8 T-cell recipients. Moreover, IFN-γ-deficient CD8 T-cell recipients had a lower expression of TGFβ1 in the epidermis than the control. Murine primary KCs undergoing FasL-induced apoptosis and incubated with IFN-γ produced TGFβ1, the production of which was inhibited by a pan-caspase inhibitor. Our results indicate that IFN-γ promotes TGFβ1 production by apoptotic KCs, which mediates the development of widespread sclerodermatous changes in KC-targeting GVHD.

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