Psoriasis Clinical Trial
Official title:
Expression of Chemokine and Chemokine Receptors in Skin in a Model of Delayed-Type Hypersensitivity
This study will examine the production of proteins called chemokines in inflammatory skin
reactions. It is thought that chemokines attract or recruit white blood cells from the blood
stream into the skin when there is a skin injury or infection, causing inflammation. This
study will examine chemokine production in induced inflammatory reactions to try to gain a
better understanding of how white blood cells are attracted to inflamed areas of the body.
Healthy normal volunteers between 33 and 60 years old may be eligible for this study if they
1) have no history of chronic skin disease; 2) are not allergic to eggs; and 3) do not tend
to form large irregular scars after trauma to the skin from, for example, cuts, scratches
and surgical incisions. Candidates will be asked a short series of questions and have a
limited skin examination.
Participants will have 10 ml (2 tablespoons) of blood drawn from an arm vein at the start
and end of the 5-day study and undergo the following procedures:
1. Day 1 - Participants receive an injection in the right upper arm of mumps antigen (a
protein commonly used to tests for immunization against mumps) and an injection of
"vehicle" (saline plus the preservatives thimerosal, glycine and formaldehyde) in the
left upper arm.
2. Day 3 - Participants who develop a swelling from the mumps antigen larger than 5 mm
wide will receive another injection of antigen in the right arm and another injection
of vehicle in the left arm. Those whose swelling is not greater than 5 mm will be
excluded from the study at this point.
3. Day 5 - All four injection sites, plus another site on the left upper arm will be
biopsied. For this procedure the five injection areas are numbed with a local
anesthetic. A punch biopsy instrument that resembles a small cookie cutter (about
one-third the diameter of a dime) is inserted about one-fifth of an inch deep into the
skin and the tissue is removed. Two stitches are used to close the wound. Antibiotic
and bandages are applied for 5 days. Nine days after the biopsy the participant returns
to NIH for removal of the stitches.
New molecular biology techniques will be used to measure changes in chemokine production in
the biopsied tissue.
In the skin, T lymphocytes are critical modulators and effectors of acquired defense responses such as delayed-type hypersensitivity (DTH). T lymphocytes and other leukocytes are recruited to the challenged site via the interaction of selectins, integrins, immunoglobulin gene superfamily molecules with their ligands, and cytokines including the large and growing chemokine group. Endogenous proinflammatory agents such as Tumor Necrosis Factor (TNF)-alpha and Interleukin-1 (IL-1) modulate lymphocyte recruitment via up-regulation of endothelial adhesion molecules and chemokines. In vitro evidence suggests that endothelial cell-derived chemokines may play a crucial role in inducing firm arrest of leukocytes on endothelial cells prior to transmigration. However, the investigation of the expression patterns and regulation of chemokines in human skin has been limited. Our goal is to qualitatively and quantitatively investigate changes in chemokine expression patterns in human skin using a DTH response to mumps antigen as a model T cell mediated immunological response. We will study the effects of intradermal injection of mumps antigen on cutaneous chemokine expression in healthy human volunteers over a five-day period. Skin biopsies of treated and mock-treated areas will be obtained and processed for state-of-the-art, real-time quantitative RT-PCR analysis of mRNA for chemokines and related molecules of interest. Routine and immunohistological analysis of chemokine receptor, chemokines, cytokines and other cell markers on fixed and frozen tissue will also be performed in an attempt to correlate chemokine expression patterns with the influx of leukocyte subsets into skin. Our hypothesis is that the chemokines will be up-regulated, but that the kinetics and expression patterns of individual chemokines may not be identical, thus possibly accounting for the differential recruitment of T lymphocytes and other leukocytes during the course of the DTH response. Chemokine expression as determined by quantitative RT-PCR will be compared with results obtained semi-quantitatively by immunohistochemical staining. This study may increase the understanding of the pathogenic mechanisms of inflammatory diseases that are characterized by the recruitment of T lymphocytes, thus possibly identifying targets for the treatment of cutaneous inflammatory diseases such as psoriasis. ;
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