Allergy: European Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology, volume 79, issue 1

Topical corticosteroids inhibit allergic skin inflammation but are ineffective in impeding the formation and expansion of resident memory T cells

Emi Ono 1
Vanina Lenief 1
Marine Alexia Lefevre 1
Roxane Cuzin 1
Aurélie Guironnet-Paquet 1, 2
Amandine Mosnier 1
Audrey Nosbaum 1, 3
Jean-Franc¸ois Nicolas 1, 3
Marc Vocanson 1
Show full list: 9 authors
Publication typeJournal Article
Publication date2023-08-04
scimago Q1
SJR3.073
CiteScore26.1
Impact factor12.6
ISSN01054538, 13989995
PubMed ID:  37539746
Immunology
Immunology and Allergy
Abstract
Background

Tissue‐resident memory T (TRM) cells are detrimental in allergic contact dermatitis (ACD), in which they contribute to the chronicity and severity of the disease.

Methods

We assessed the impact of a standard topical corticosteroid (TCS) treatment, triamcinolone acetonide (TA), on the formation, maintenance and reactivation of epidermal TRM cells in a preclinical model of ACD to 2,4‐dinitrofluorobenzene. TA 0.01% was applied at different time points of ACD response and we monitored skin inflammation and tracked CD8+ CD69+ CD103+ TRM by flow cytometry and RNA sequencing.

Results

The impact of TA on TRM formation depended on treatment regimen: (i) in a preventive mode, that is, in sensitized mice before challenge, TA transiently inhibited the infiltration of effector T cells and the accumulation of TRM upon hapten challenge. In contrast, (ii) in a curative mode, that is, at the peak of the ACD response, TA blocked skin inflammation but failed to prevent the formation of TRM. Finally, (iii) in a proactive mode, that is, on previous eczema lesions, TA had no effect on the survival of skin TRM, but transiently inhibited their reactivation program upon allergen reexposure. Indeed, specific TRM progressively regained proliferative functions upon TA discontinuation and expanded in the tissue, leading to exaggerated iterative responses. Interestingly, TRM re‐expansion correlated with the decreased clearance of hapten moieties from the skin induced by repeated TA applications.

Conclusions

Our results demonstrate that TCS successfully treat ACD inflammation, but are mostly ineffective in impeding the formation and expansion of allergen‐specific TRM, which certainly restricts the induction of lasting tolerance in patients with chronic dermatitis.

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