The expression of cytokines and chemokines potentially distinguishes mild and severe
psoriatic non-lesional and resolved skin from healthy skin and indicates different
stages of inflammation
In the psoriatic non-lesional (PS-NL) skin, the tissue environment potentially influences
the development and recurrence of lesions. Therefore, we aimed to investigate mechanisms
involved in regulating tissue organization in PS-NL skin. Cytokine, chemokine, protease,
and protease inhibitor levels were compared between PS-NL skin of patients with mild
and severe symptoms and healthy skin. By comparing mild and severe PS-NL vs. healthy
skin, differentially expressed cytokines and chemokines suggested alterations in hemostasis-related
processes, while protease inhibitors showed no psoriasis severity-related changes.
Comparing severe and mild PS-NL skin revealed disease severity-related changes in
the expression of proteases, cytokines, and chemokines primarily involving methyl-CpG
binding protein 2 (MECP2) and extracellular matrix organization-related mechanisms.
Cytokine and chemokine expression in clinically resolved versus healthy skin showed
slight interleukin activity, differing from patterns in mild and severe PS-NL skin.
Immunofluorescence analysis revealed the severity-dependent nuclear expression pattern
of MECP2 and decreased expression of 5-methylcytosine and 5-hydroxymethylcytosine
in the PS-NL vs. healthy skin, and in resolved vs. healthy skin. Our results suggest
distinct cytokine-chemokine signaling between the resolved and PS-NL skin of untreated
patients with varying severities. These results highlight an altered inflammatory
response, epigenetic regulation, and tissue organization in different types of PS-NL
skin with possibly distinct, severity-dependent para-inflammatory states.