1. IL-36[gamma] drives skin toxicity induced by EGFR/MEK inhibition and commensal Cutibacterium acnes
- Author
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Satoh, Takashi K., Meier-Schiesser, Mark MelletBarbara, Fenini, Gabriele, Otsuka, Atsushi, Beer, Hans-Dietmar, Rordorf, Tamara, Maul, Julia-Tatjana, Hafner, Jurg, Navarini, Alexander A., Contasso, Emmanuel, and French, Lars E.
- Subjects
Thermo Fisher Scientific Inc. ,Cetuximab ,Skin care ,Acne ,Genes ,Toxicity ,Dermatologic agents ,Skin ,Epidermal growth factors ,Gene expression ,Scientific equipment industry ,Biochemistry ,Criminal investigation ,Cancer treatment ,Motor vehicle drivers ,Neutrophilia ,Health care industry - Abstract
Epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) and MEK inhibitors (EGFRi/MEKi) are beneficial for the treatment of solid cancers but are frequently associated with severe therapy-limiting acneiform skin toxicities. The underlying molecular mechanisms are poorly understood. Using gene expression profiling we identified IL-36[gamma] and IL-8 as candidate drivers of EGFRi/MEKi skin toxicity. We provide molecular and translational evidence that EGFRi/MEKi in concert with the skin commensal bacterium Cutibacterium acnes act synergistically to induce IL-36[gamma] in keratinocytes and subsequently IL-8, leading to cutaneous neutrophilia. IL-36[gamma] expression was the combined result of C. acnes-induced NF-[kappa]B activation and EGFRi/MEKi-mediated expression of the transcription factor Kruppel-like factor 4 (KLF4), due to the presence of both NF-[kappa]B and KLF4 binding sites in the human IL-36[gamma] gene promoter. EGFRi/MEKi increased KLF4 expression by blockade of the EGFR/MEK/ERK pathway. These results provide an insight into understanding the pathological mechanism of the acneiform skin toxicities induced by EGFRi/MEKi and identify IL-36[gamma] and the transcription factor KLF4 as potential therapeutic targets., Introduction Agents targeting the epidermal growth factor receptor-mediated (EGFR-mediated) signaling pathway are increasingly used for the treatment of advanced lung, pancreatic, colorectal, and head and neck cancers, which benefit from [...]
- Published
- 2020
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