7 research outputs found
Improving the skin barrier function in atopic dermatitis
Atopic dermatitis, AD (synonym eczema) is a chronic inflammatory skin disease. It affects
between 10 to 20% of children and 1 to 3% of adults worldwide. It is an important cause of
morbidity and is estimated to cost £465 million per annum to the UK. AD is part of a family of Th-2
driven diseases and is often the first of these atopic diseases to manifest. The development of AD is
often followed by asthma and allergic rhinitis later in life (a phenomenon known as the ‘atopic
march’).
Up to 50% of moderate to severe AD cases have been associated with genetic mutations
affecting the epidermal barrier protein filaggrin. Filaggrin aggregates keratin filaments during
terminal keratinocyte differentiation, allowing normal epidermal stratification. The role of filaggrin
in maintaining a functional skin barrier is further supported by a clinical study conducted by
ourselves. This is the first clinical study on a European cohort (58 participants) which showed that
FLG mutations were associated with experimentally demonstrable defects of skin barrier function
(increased baseline transepidermal water loss), more so following exposure to a chemical irritant.
However, the majority of patients with AD, especially the milder cases, do not have FLG mutations.
Some of the wild-type patients in our study were noticed to have accumulation of the large filaggrin
proprotein and a lack of filaggrin monomers, indicating defective proteolysis of profilaggrin into the
functional monomers. Our study also found disproportionately raised protease inhibitory activities
amongst the AD participants. This inappropriately raised protease inhibition may interfere with
profilaggrin proteolysis, leading to the development of AD in some wild-type patients.
Having demonstrated that deficiency of filaggrin monomers is associated with a defective skin
barrier, we focused on the function of filaggrin in the skin and attempted to improve the skin barrier
function. In addition to keratin aggregation, filaggrin constitutes the natural moisturizing factors in
the epidermis following its natural breakdown into amino acids. We note that filaggrin is
disproportionately rich in amino acid histidine, implying that this amino acid may have a particular
significance in maintaining a functional epidermal barrier. Using an in-house skin-equivalent model,
we have shown that by increasing the histidine content in the cell culture media, we could increase
the expression of filaggrin monomers and reduce the penetration of a fluorescent dye into the skin-equivalents.
The latter indicates improved barrier function. Finally, we conducted a pilot human
study which showed that histidine, when applied to mechanically damaged skin in AD and healthy
participants, was associated with a faster recovery of the skin barrier function.
These studies suggest that histidine is of therapeutic benefits in AD. A histidine-based
treatment may be developed as an alternative to current anti-inflammatory and immunosuppressive
agents used to treat AD