PeerJ · 2023

TLR7 promotes skin inflammation via activating NFκB-mTORC1 axis in rosacea

Huang, Y. and Liu, D. and Chen, M. and Xu, S. and Peng, Q. and Zhu, Y. and Long, J. and Liu, T. and Deng, Z. and Xie, H. and Li, J. and Liu, F. and Xiao, W.

doi:10.7717/peerj.15976

Abstract

Rosacea is a chronic inflammatory skin disease originated from damaged skin barrier and innate/adaptive immune dysregulation. Toll-like receptors (TLRs) sense injured skin and initiate downstream inflammatory and immune responses, whose role in rosacea is not fully understood. Here, via RNA-sequencing analysis, we found that the TLR signaling pathway is the top-ranked signaling pathway enriched in rosacea skin lesions, in which TLR7 is highlighted and positively correlated with the inflammation severity of disease. In LL37-induced rosacea-like mouse models, silencing TLR7 prevented the development of rosacea-like skin inflammation. Specifically, we demonstrated that overexpressing TLR7 in keratinocytes stimulates rapamycin-sensitive mTOR complex 1 (mTORC1) pathway via NFκB signaling. Ultimately, TLR7/NFκ B/mTORC1 axis promotes the production of cytokines and chemokines, leading to the migration of CD4+T cells, which are infiltrated in the lesional skin of rosacea. Our report reveals the crucial role of TLR7 in rosacea pathogenesis and indicatesa promising candidate for rosacea treatments.

← Back to publications

PeerJ 2023

TLR7 promotes skin inflammation via activating NFκB-mTORC1 axis in rosacea

Huang, Y. and Liu, D. and Chen, M. and Xu, S. and Peng, Q. and Zhu, Y. and Long, J. and Liu, T. and Deng, Z. and Xie, H. and Li, J. and Liu, F. and Xiao, W.

doi:10.7717/peerj.15976

Abstract

Rosacea is a chronic inflammatory skin disease originated from damaged skin barrier and innate/adaptive immune dysregulation. Toll-like receptors (TLRs) sense injured skin and initiate downstream inflammatory and immune responses, whose role in rosacea is not fully understood. Here, via RNA-sequencing analysis, we found that the TLR signaling pathway is the top-ranked signaling pathway enriched in rosacea skin lesions, in which TLR7 is highlighted and positively correlated with the inflammation severity of disease. In LL37-induced rosacea-like mouse models, silencing TLR7 prevented the development of rosacea-like skin inflammation. Specifically, we demonstrated that overexpressing TLR7 in keratinocytes stimulates rapamycin-sensitive mTOR complex 1 (mTORC1) pathway via NFκB signaling. Ultimately, TLR7/NFκ B/mTORC1 axis promotes the production of cytokines and chemokines, leading to the migration of CD4+T cells, which are infiltrated in the lesional skin of rosacea. Our report reveals the crucial role of TLR7 in rosacea pathogenesis and indicatesa promising candidate for rosacea treatments.

Back to publications

Central South University Xiangya Hospital Li Lab Skin Aging and Hair Regeneration Research Center