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  3. Spatial proteomics identifies JAKi as treatment for a lethal skin disease.
 

Spatial proteomics identifies JAKi as treatment for a lethal skin disease.

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BORIS DOI
10.48620/76391
Publisher DOI
10.1038/s41586-024-08061-0
PubMed ID
39415009
Description
Toxic epidermal necrolysis (TEN) is a fatal drug-induced skin reaction triggered by common medications and is an emerging public health issue1-3. Patients with TEN undergo severe and sudden epidermal detachment caused by keratinocyte cell death. Although molecular mechanisms that drive keratinocyte cell death have been proposed, the main drivers remain unknown, and there is no effective therapy for TEN4-6. Here, to systematically map molecular changes that are associated with TEN and identify potential druggable targets, we utilized deep visual proteomics, which provides single-cell-based, cell-type-resolution proteomics7,8. We analysed formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded archived skin tissue biopsies of three types of cutaneous drug reactions with varying severity and quantified more than 5,000 proteins in keratinocytes and skin-infiltrating immune cells. This revealed a marked enrichment of type I and type II interferon signatures in the immune cell and keratinocyte compartment of patients with TEN, as well as phosphorylated STAT1 activation. Targeted inhibition with the pan-JAK inhibitor tofacitinib in vitro reduced keratinocyte-directed cytotoxicity. In vivo oral administration of tofacitinib, baricitinib or the JAK1-specific inhibitors abrocitinib or upadacitinib ameliorated clinical and histological disease severity in two distinct mouse models of TEN. Crucially, treatment with JAK inhibitors (JAKi) was safe and associated with rapid cutaneous re-epithelialization and recovery in seven patients with TEN. This study uncovers the JAK/STAT and interferon signalling pathways as key pathogenic drivers of TEN and demonstrates the potential of targeted JAKi as a curative therapy.
Date of Publication
2024-11
Publication Type
Article
Subject(s)
600 - Technology::610 - Medicine & health
Language(s)
en
Contributor(s)
Nordmann, Thierry M
Anderton, Holly
Hasegawa, Akito
Schweizer, Lisa
Zhang, Peng
Stadler, Pia-Charlotte
Sinha, Ankit
Metousis, Andreas
Rosenberger, Florian A
Zwiebel, Maximilian
Satoh, Takashi K
Anzengruber, Florian
Strauss, Maximilian T
Tanzer, Maria C
Saito, Yuki
Gong, Ting
Thielert, Marvin
Kimura, Haruna
Silke, Natasha
Rodriguez, Edwin H
Restivo, Gaetana
Nguyen, Hong Ha
Gross, Annette
Feldmeyer, Laurence
Clinic of Dermatology
Joerg, Lukasorcid-logo
Clinic of Pneumology and Allergology
Levesque, Mitchell P
Murray, Peter J
Ingen-Housz-Oro, Saskia
Mund, Andreas
Abe, Riichiro
Silke, John
Ji, Chao
French, Lars E
Mann, Matthias
Additional Credits
Clinic of Dermatology
Clinic of Pneumology and Allergology
Series
Nature
Publisher
Nature Research
ISSN
0028-0836
Access(Rights)
open.access
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