Abstract

BackgroundCutaneous lupus erythematosus (CLE) is an interferon (IFN) -driven autoimmune skin disease characterized by an extensive cytotoxic lesional inflammation with activation of different innate immune pathways. Aim of our study was to investigate the specific role of Janus kinase 1 (JAK1) activation in this disease and the potential benefit of selective JAK1 inhibitors as targeted therapy in a preclinical CLE model.MethodsLesional skin of patients with different CLE subtypes and healthy controls (N = 31) were investigated on JAK1 activation and expression of IFN-associated mediators via immunohistochemistry and gene expression analyses. The functional role of JAK1 and efficacy of inhibition was evaluated in vitro using cultured keratinocytes stimulated with endogenous nucleic acids. Results were confirmed in vivo using an established lupus-prone mouse model.ResultsProinflammatory immune pathways, including JAK/STAT signaling, are significantly upregulated within inflamed CLE skin. Here, lesional keratinocytes and dermal immune cells strongly express activated phospho-JAK1. Selective pharmacological JAK1 inhibition significantly reduces the expression of typical proinflammatory mediators such as CXCL chemokines, BLyS, TRAIL, and AIM2 in CLE in vitro models and also improves skin lesions in lupus-prone TREX1–/– -mice markedly.ConclusionIFN-associated JAK/STAT activation plays a crucial role in the pathophysiology of CLE. Selective inhibition of JAK1 leads to a decrease of cytokine expression, reduced immune activation, and decline of keratinocyte cell death. Topical treatment with a JAK1-specific inhibitor significantly improves CLE-like skin lesions in a lupus-prone TREX1–/– -mouse model and appears to be a promising therapeutic approach for CLE patients.

Highlights

  • Cutaneous lupus erythematosus (CLE) is an inflammatory autoimmune skin disease with heterogenous subtypes varying from localized discoid plaques to severe and widespread erythrosquamous lesions in affected patients [1]

  • In CLE skin lesions the expression of phosphorylated JAK1 (pJAK1) was significantly increased in keratinocytes from stratum basale to stratum granulosum and in dermal infiltrating immune cells

  • PJAK1 was significantly enhanced in lichen planus (LP), an autoimmune disease sharing common histological features with CLE (Figures 2A,B)

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Summary

Introduction

Cutaneous lupus erythematosus (CLE) is an inflammatory autoimmune skin disease with heterogenous subtypes varying from localized discoid plaques to severe and widespread erythrosquamous lesions in affected patients [1]. It is considered that cell debris clearance is impaired entailing secondary necrosis [5, 6]. In some cases such as familial chilblain lupus the underlying cause can be TREX1 gene mutations leading to a dysfunctional TREX1 exonuclease and high accumulation of cytosolic DNA [7, 8]. Cutaneous lupus erythematosus (CLE) is an interferon (IFN) -driven autoimmune skin disease characterized by an extensive cytotoxic lesional inflammation with activation of different innate immune pathways. Aim of our study was to investigate the specific role of Janus kinase 1 (JAK1) activation in this disease and the potential benefit of selective JAK1 inhibitors as targeted therapy in a preclinical CLE model

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