Abstract
Psychological stress triggers onset and development of vitiligo in humans. However, the mechanism of psychological stress on vitiligo remains unclear. The study aims to investigate whether psychological stress promotes vitiligo and explore the underlying mechanism. A depigmentation mouse model induced by applying a skin-bleaching reagent monobenzone to dorsal skin and an in vitro HaCaT keratinocyte death model induced by monobenzone were employed to explore the effect of restraint stress, which mimics psychological stress, on depigmentation. The results indicated that restraint stress promoted vitiligo-related depigmentation, vacuolisation, spongiosis, CD8+ T lymphocyte infiltration, and loss of melanocytes in the skin. Restraint stress activated cutaneous NLR family containing pyrin domain protein 3 (NLRP3) inflammasome. In addition, restraint stress aggravated anxiety-like behaviors and increased levels of macrophage migration inhibitory factor (MIF) and corticosterone in the circulation, accompanied with decreasing the expression of cutaneous 8-oxoguanine DNA glycosylase (OGG1) in depigmentation mice. In vitro experiments demonstrated that activation of glucocorticoid receptor (GR) by cortisol upregulated NLRP3 expression dependent on MIF, and directly decreased the transcription of OGG1. Blockade of MIF reversed the NLRP3 signal in restraint stress-induced depigmentation mice. In conclusion, restraint stress promotes vitiligo-related depigmentation in mice via the activation of GR/MIF signaling pathway. The findings provide a theoretical basis for prevention and treatments of vitiligo with therapies of targeting GR, MIF, and OGG1.
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