Abstract

Little is known about the pathogenesis of scleromyxedema, a life-threatening fibromucinosis disease with immunological dysregulation. To investigate on T-cell phenotype, function and cytokine biology in search of new insights supporting the immunopathogenesis of the disease. We analysed the frequency of circulating lymphocyte subsets, the T-cell maturation stage, the generation of antigen-specific T-cell lines and T-cell cytokine secretion. The analysis of T-cell maturation stage and the TCR spectratyping findings revealed that scleromyxedema patients showed clear immunological signs of long-lasting immune system activation and stimulation leading to a skewed T-cell repertoire. Moreover, these analyses showed that both CD4+ and CD8+ T cells from scleromyxedema patients have a profound deficiency (even after stimulation) relatively to the production of IFN-γ and IL17 with respect to healthy donor control cells, while they are massively skewed towards IL4 secretion after stimulation. Our data indicate that a chronic Th2-skewed T-cell response against an unknown target antigen leading to abnormally high IL4 secretion, a pro-fibrotic cytokine, is a main immunological hallmark of scleromyxedema patients. These results, never reported before, may have a translational therapeutic value due to the availability of anti-IL4 agents such as dupilumab.

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