Regulation of cytokines by small RNAs during skin inflammation

<p>Abstract</p> <p>Intercellular signaling by cytokines is a vital feature of the innate immune system. In skin, an inflammatory response is mediated by cytokines and an entwined network of cellular communication between T-cells and epidermal keratinocytes. Dysregulated cytokine pr...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Mikkelsen Jacob G, Bak Rasmus O
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2010-07-01
Series:Journal of Biomedical Science
Online Access:http://www.jbiomedsci.com/content/17/1/53
id doaj-05adf9ed4cd440a784e56a7410423591
record_format Article
spelling doaj-05adf9ed4cd440a784e56a74104235912020-11-24T22:14:50ZengBMCJournal of Biomedical Science1021-77701423-01272010-07-011715310.1186/1423-0127-17-53Regulation of cytokines by small RNAs during skin inflammationMikkelsen Jacob GBak Rasmus O<p>Abstract</p> <p>Intercellular signaling by cytokines is a vital feature of the innate immune system. In skin, an inflammatory response is mediated by cytokines and an entwined network of cellular communication between T-cells and epidermal keratinocytes. Dysregulated cytokine production, orchestrated by activated T-cells homing to the skin, is believed to be the main cause of psoriasis, a common inflammatory skin disorder. Cytokines are heavily regulated at the transcriptional level, but emerging evidence suggests that regulatory mechanisms that operate after transcription play a key role in balancing the production of cytokines. Herein, we review the nature of cytokine signaling in psoriasis with particular emphasis on regulation by mRNA destabilizing elements and the potential targeting of cytokine-encoding mRNAs by miRNAs. The proposed linkage between mRNA decay mediated by AU-rich elements and miRNA association is described and discussed as a possible general feature of cytokine regulation in skin. Moreover, we describe the latest attempts to therapeutically target cytokines at the RNA level in psoriasis by exploiting the cellular RNA interference machinery. The applicability of cytokine-encoding mRNAs as future clinical drug targets is evaluated, and advances and obstacles related to topical administration of RNA-based drugs targeting the cytokine circuit in psoriasis are described.</p> http://www.jbiomedsci.com/content/17/1/53
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Mikkelsen Jacob G
Bak Rasmus O
spellingShingle Mikkelsen Jacob G
Bak Rasmus O
Regulation of cytokines by small RNAs during skin inflammation
Journal of Biomedical Science
author_facet Mikkelsen Jacob G
Bak Rasmus O
author_sort Mikkelsen Jacob G
title Regulation of cytokines by small RNAs during skin inflammation
title_short Regulation of cytokines by small RNAs during skin inflammation
title_full Regulation of cytokines by small RNAs during skin inflammation
title_fullStr Regulation of cytokines by small RNAs during skin inflammation
title_full_unstemmed Regulation of cytokines by small RNAs during skin inflammation
title_sort regulation of cytokines by small rnas during skin inflammation
publisher BMC
series Journal of Biomedical Science
issn 1021-7770
1423-0127
publishDate 2010-07-01
description <p>Abstract</p> <p>Intercellular signaling by cytokines is a vital feature of the innate immune system. In skin, an inflammatory response is mediated by cytokines and an entwined network of cellular communication between T-cells and epidermal keratinocytes. Dysregulated cytokine production, orchestrated by activated T-cells homing to the skin, is believed to be the main cause of psoriasis, a common inflammatory skin disorder. Cytokines are heavily regulated at the transcriptional level, but emerging evidence suggests that regulatory mechanisms that operate after transcription play a key role in balancing the production of cytokines. Herein, we review the nature of cytokine signaling in psoriasis with particular emphasis on regulation by mRNA destabilizing elements and the potential targeting of cytokine-encoding mRNAs by miRNAs. The proposed linkage between mRNA decay mediated by AU-rich elements and miRNA association is described and discussed as a possible general feature of cytokine regulation in skin. Moreover, we describe the latest attempts to therapeutically target cytokines at the RNA level in psoriasis by exploiting the cellular RNA interference machinery. The applicability of cytokine-encoding mRNAs as future clinical drug targets is evaluated, and advances and obstacles related to topical administration of RNA-based drugs targeting the cytokine circuit in psoriasis are described.</p>
url http://www.jbiomedsci.com/content/17/1/53
work_keys_str_mv AT mikkelsenjacobg regulationofcytokinesbysmallrnasduringskininflammation
AT bakrasmuso regulationofcytokinesbysmallrnasduringskininflammation
_version_ 1725796934320390144