Expression of antimicrobial peptides in the normal and involved skin of patients with infective cellulitis.
Publication/Presentation Date
11-1-2007
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Endogenous antimicrobial peptides participate in the innate defense of skin against a variety of pathogens. The systemic expression of these peptides in normal-appearing skin of patients with infective cellulitis is unknown.
METHODS: Study patients were adults with infective cellulitis and signs of systemic inflammation. Skin biopsy and serum specimens were obtained from patients and from control subjects with no active infection. Cathelicidin and human beta-defensin 2 mRNA expression were determined by real-time polymerase chain reaction.
RESULTS: Skin biopsy specimens from 11 patients and 4 uninfected control subjects were analyzed. The relative expression level for cathelicidin mRNA was elevated in both the involved and the distal normal-appearing skin of patients with cellulitis, compared with expression in the skin of control subjects (mean ratios, 39.46 vs. 1.32, P=.0059; and 21.41 vs. 1.32, P=.0059). Similarly, the relative expression level of human beta -defensin 2 mRNA was elevated in both the involved skin (mean ratios, 20,844 vs. 11.65; P=.0015) and in distal normal-appearing skin of patients with cellulitis (mean ratios, 201.1 vs. 11.65; P=.0103).
DISCUSSION: In response to cutaneous infection there is a local and distal increase in endogenous antimicrobial peptide mRNA in both involved and normal-appearing skin. These observations show, for the first time to our knowledge, that after infection the human body responds by increasing systemic innate immunity.
Volume
196
Issue
9
First Page
1425
Last Page
1430
ISSN
0022-1899
Published In/Presented At
Stryjewski, M. E., Hall, R. P., Chu, V. H., Kanafani, Z. A., O'Riordan, W. D., Weinstock, M. S., Stienecker, R. S., Streilein, R., Dorschner, R. A., Fowler, V. G., Jr, Corey, G. R., & Gallo, R. L. (2007). Expression of antimicrobial peptides in the normal and involved skin of patients with infective cellulitis. The Journal of infectious diseases, 196(9), 1425–1430. https://doi.org/10.1086/522630
Disciplines
Medicine and Health Sciences
PubMedID
17922409
Department(s)
Department of Emergency Medicine
Document Type
Article