The surprise discovery of a new type of cell explains how distress to the skin early in life may prime a person for inflammatory skin disease later, according to a new study in Nature. This finding will likely lead to treatments for autoimmune disorders like scleroderma, and inform understanding of inflammatory disease.
“The results reinforce the idea that what you’re exposed to initially may have lasting ramifications,” said lead researcher Michael Rosenblum, MD, PhD. “It appears that early exposure to inflammation can, through these cells we discovered, imprint an ability for tissues to develop inflammatory disease later in life.”
The team came across this new type of cell while investigating the effects of certain actions known to evoke immune response in mice. One of these actions involved knocking out a group of skin cells that suppress the immune system. Without that regulation, said Dr Rosenblum, a unique cell was observed that seemed to act as a shelter for pathogenic immune cells not typically seen in skin tissues.
“We had to knock out one cell population to see that they were controlling the growth and capacity of these other, unknown cells,” he said, noting that the new cells only became apparent in the tissue exposed to inflammatory triggers. “What normally would be a deserted island on the skin was now inhabited by all these strangers,” he said.
The team dubbed these strangers ‘TIFFs’ (Th2-interacting fascial fibroblasts) after the Th2 immune cells that they help to house. The location of TIFFs in the skin suggests that they belong to a group of cells that make up the fibrous connective tissue that is fascia, said lead author Ian Boothby, a graduate student in Dr Rosenblum’s lab.
“Because most organs have fascia of some sort, what we’re learning about TIFFs in skin may well be widely applicable to the rest of the body, meaning that these cells may play a role in a huge number of inflammatory diseases,” he said.
Boothby and Dr Rosenblum when skin without regulatory cells receives inflammatory triggers, the TIFFs spread like wildfire and become a sort of holding pen for the Th2 immune cells. Later in life, when there is even a small insult to the skin, Dr Rosenblum said, the TIFFs open their floodgates, unleashing the Th2 cells.
It seems that, through these cells, early exposure to inflammalation can leave a life-long imprint.
“All you need to do is push the immune system just a little bit, with a wound or with stress, to unleash all the pathogenic cells living in these TIFFs and create an exaggerated inflammatory response,” he said.
The researchers hypothesise that the exaggerated response may manifest as the creation of fibroses in the fascia, the driving force behind inflammatory skin diseases such as scleroderma.
To confirm the presence of TIFFs in human skin, the team obtained samples from volunteers with eosinophilic fasciitis (EF), a rare inflammatory disorder in which eosinophils build up in the skin fascia, the fibrous tissue between the skin and the muscles below it.
Comparing the EF samples to those of healthy skin, the researchers found TIFFs in both, but looked completely different. In healthy skin, the fascia forms a thin, spidery network between fat cells, while in the EF skin sample, the cells had expanded to form thick bands of fibrous tissue.
Revealing the mysteries of inflammation
TIFFs appear to be present in every organ, said Dr Rosenblum, usually found in the fascia surrounding major organs and serve a role in maintaining structure. They’re also prone to interacting with immune cells. He postulates that TIFFs might have evolved as a sort of emergency brigade in case of injury, able to jump-start repair in the case of internal injury.
“In patients with scleroderma or other fibrosing diseases like EF, that repair program may be kind of co-opted, resulting in this chronic wound-healing response,” said Dr Rosenblum. “If we can understand the biology of these cells, we can come in with drugs that revert them back to what they’re supposed to be doing.”