Abstract

Scalp psoriasis shows a variable clinical spectrum and in many cases poses a great therapeutic challenge. However, it remains unknown whether the immune response of scalp psoriasis differs from understood pathomechanisms of psoriasis in other skin areas. We sought to determine the cellular and molecular phenotype of scalp psoriasis by performing a comparative analysis of scalp and skin using lesional and nonlesional samples from 20 Caucasian subjects with untreated moderate to severe psoriasis and significant scalp involvement and 10 control subjects without psoriasis. Our results suggest that even in the scalp, psoriasis is a disease of the inter-follicular skin. The immune mechanisms that mediate scalp psoriasis were found to be similar to those involved in skin psoriasis. However, the magnitude of dysregulation, number of differentially expressed genes, and enrichment of the psoriatic genomic fingerprint were more prominent in skin lesions. Furthermore, the scalp transcriptome showed increased modulation of several gene-sets, particularly those induced by interferon-gamma, compared with that of skin psoriasis, which was mainly associated with activation of TNFα/L-17/IL-22-induced keratinocyte response genes. We also detected differences in expression of gene-sets involving negative regulation, epigenetic regulation, epidermal differentiation, and dendritic cell or Th1/Th17/Th22-related T-cell processes.

Highlights

  • ObjectivesThe aim of this study was to describe the immunopathology and genomic fingerprinting of scalp psoriasis and to compare the results with earlier findings of psoriasis on other areas of the body

  • Psoriasis is a chronic inflammatory skin disease affecting 2–3% of the population

  • We sought to compare the hyperproliferative state of scalp psoriasis by measuring epidermal thickness and K16 staining on different scalp compartments: IFL epidermis, inFD epithelium, outer root sheath and LF (Figure A in S1 File)

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Summary

Objectives

The aim of this study was to describe the immunopathology and genomic fingerprinting of scalp psoriasis and to compare the results with earlier findings of psoriasis on other areas of the body

Methods
Results
Conclusion
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