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Dive into the research topics where Leanne M. Johnson-Huang is active.

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Featured researches published by Leanne M. Johnson-Huang.


Disease Models & Mechanisms | 2012

Putting together the psoriasis puzzle: an update on developing targeted therapies

Leanne M. Johnson-Huang; Michelle A. Lowes; James G. Krueger

Psoriasis vulgaris is a chronic, debilitating skin disease that affects millions of people worldwide. There is no mouse model that accurately reproduces all facets of the disease, but the accessibility of skin tissue from patients has facilitated the elucidation of many pathways involved in the pathogenesis of psoriasis and highlighted the importance of the immune system in the disease. The pathophysiological relevance of these findings has been supported by genetic studies that identified polymorphisms in genes associated with NFκB activation, IL-23 signaling and T helper 17 (Th17)-cell adaptive immune responses, and in genes associated with the epidermal barrier. Recently developed biologic agents that selectively target specific components of the immune system are highly effective for treating psoriasis. In particular, emerging therapeutics are focused on targeting the IL-23–Th17-cell axis, and several agents that block IL-17 signaling have shown promising results in early-phase clinical trials. This review discusses lessons learned about the pathogenesis of psoriasis from mouse-and patient-based studies, emphasizing how the outcomes of clinical trials with T-cell-targeted and cytokine-blocking therapies have clarified our understanding of the disease.


PLOS ONE | 2014

IL-17 Induces an Expanded Range of Downstream Genes in Reconstituted Human Epidermis Model

Andrea Chiricozzi; Kristine E. Nograles; Leanne M. Johnson-Huang; Judilyn Fuentes-Duculan; Irma Cardinale; Kathleen M. Bonifacio; Nicholas Gulati; Hiroshi Mitsui; Emma Guttman-Yassky; Mayte Suárez-Fariñas; James G. Krueger

Background IL-17 is the defining cytokine of the Th17, Tc17, and γδ T cell populations that plays a critical role in mediating inflammation and autoimmunity. Psoriasis vulgaris is an inflammatory skin disease mediated by Th1 and Th17 cytokines with relevant contributions of IFN-γ, TNF-α, and IL-17. Despite the pivotal role IL-17 plays in psoriasis, and in contrast to the other key mediators involved in the psoriasis cytokine cascade that are capable of inducing broad effects on keratinocytes, IL-17 was demonstrated to regulate the expression of a limited number of genes in monolayer keratinocytes cultured in vitro. Methodology/Principal Findings Given the clinical efficacy of anti-IL-17 agents is associated with an impressive reduction in a large set of inflammatory genes, we sought a full-thickness skin model that more closely resemble in vivo epidermal architecture. Using a reconstructed human epidermis (RHE), IL-17 was able to upregulate 419 gene probes and downregulate 216 gene probes. As possible explanation for the increased gene induction in the RHE model is that C/CAAT-enhancer-binding proteins (C/EBP) -β, the transcription factor regulating IL-17-responsive genes, is expressed preferentially in differentiated keratinocytes. Conclusions/Significance The genes identified in IL-17-treated RHE are likely relevant to the IL-17 effects in psoriasis, since ixekizumab (anti-IL-17A agent) strongly suppressed the “RHE” genes in psoriasis patients treated in vivo with this IL-17 antagonist.


Journal of Clinical Immunology | 2009

Cytokine-Producing Dendritic Cells in the Pathogenesis of Inflammatory Skin Diseases

Leanne M. Johnson-Huang; N. Scott McNutt; James G. Krueger; Michelle A. Lowes

IntroductionInflammatory skin diseases can be examined from many viewpoints. In this review, we consider three distinct cutaneous inflammatory diseases from the point of view of their major lesional dendritic cell (DC) subpopulations. The DC populations considered are Langerhans cells, myeloid DCs, and plasmacytoid DCs (pDCs), with specific attention to the presence and role of the inflammatory counterparts of these cells. From such a “dendritic cell-centric” focus, psoriasis, atopic dermatitis (AD), and cutaneous lupus erythematosus (CLE) are explored.DiscussionIn psoriasis, there is a specific population of myeloid “inflammatory” DCs that appears to play an important pathogenic role, while pDCs have been recently implicated in the initiation of psoriatic lesions. In AD, Langerhans cells may be important during initiation, while “inflammatory dendritic epidermal cells” (IDECs) appear to be abundant in lesional epidermis and dermis and contribute to maintenance of AD. These IDECs may actually be analogous to the myeloid inflammatory DCs found in the epidermal and dermal compartments of the skin in psoriasis, although they express distinct surface markers and induce different T cell polarities as a result of different cytokine milieu in which they develop. CLE has been recently characterized as a type I IFN-mediated disease, and pDCs are integral to the pathogenesis of this disease.ConclusionThus, these DC subpopulations and their products will be reviewed in the context of these three cutaneous diseases to provide clinico-pathophysiological correlations between the lesional DCs, their products, and the skin diseases.


The Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology | 2011

Lesional dendritic cells in patients with chronic atopic dermatitis and psoriasis exhibit parallel ability to activate T-cell subsets

Hideki Fujita; Avner Shemer; Mayte Suárez-Fariñas; Leanne M. Johnson-Huang; Suzanne Tintle; Irma Cardinale; Judilyn Fuentes-Duculan; Inna Novitskaya; John A. Carucci; James G. Krueger; Emma Guttman-Yassky

BACKGROUND Atopic dermatitis (AD) and psoriasis represent polar immune diseases. AD is a T(H)2/T(H)22-dominant disease, whereas psoriasis is considered a T(H)1/T(H)17 disease. Local immune deviation is suggested to be regulated by dendritic cell (DC)-induced T-cell polarization and recruitment of specific T-cell subsets by chemokines. Although the role of chemokines is well documented, the actual contribution of DCs to activate polar T-cell subsets in human subjects is still a matter of speculation. OBJECTIVE We sought to elucidate the significance of each cutaneous DC subset in disease-specific T-cell immune deviation. METHODS We performed a comprehensive analysis of major cutaneous resident (Langerhans cells and blood dendritic cell antigen 1-positive dermal DCs) and inflammatory (inflammatory dendritic epidermal cells and blood dendritic cell antigen 1-negative dermal DCs) DC subsets directly isolated from the lesional skin of patients with AD and those with psoriasis. RESULTS The ability of each DC subset to expand T(H)1, T(H)2, T(H)17, and T(H)22 subsets was similar between the 2 diseases, despite the association of both with accumulation of resident and inflammatory DCs. We also confirmed differential upregulation of chemokine expression in patients with AD (CCL17, CCL18, and CCL22) and psoriasis (CXCL1, IL-8, and CCL20). The expression of CCL17 and CCL22 was higher in Langerhans cells from patients with AD than from patients with psoriasis, whereas the opposite was observed for CXCL9 and CXCL10. CONCLUSION Our results suggest that DC polarity does not directly drive differential T-cell subset responses. Alternatively, disease-specific chemokines might recruit specific memory T-cell subsets into the skin, which in turn might be activated and expanded by DCs at the site of inflammation, maintaining differential immune polarity in these diseases.


Journal of Investigative Dermatology | 2012

Human Keratinocytes' Response to Injury Upregulates CCL20 and Other Genes Linking Innate and Adaptive Immunity

Milène Kennedy-Crispin; Erika Billick; Hiroshi Mitsui; Nicholas Gulati; Hideki Fujita; Patricia Gilleaudeau; Mary Sullivan-Whalen; Leanne M. Johnson-Huang; Mayte Suárez-Fariñas; James G. Krueger

In the early stages of wound healing, keratinocytes become “activated” and release inflammatory molecules such as interleukin-1 and interleukin-8 that are linked to innate immune responses and neutrophil recruitment. It is unclear, however, whether keratinocytes release molecules linked to adaptive immune responses, e.g. CCL20, in their early state of activation without signals from infiltrating T cells. This study aims to isolate the immediate alterations in protective and inflammatory gene expression that occur in epidermal keratinocytes, with a particular focus on molecules associated with cell-mediated immunity. We used dispase-separated epidermis, followed by intercellular disassociation by trypsinization, as a model for epidermal injury. We obtained a pure population of keratinocytes using flow cytometry. As a control for uninjured epidermis, we performed laser capture microdissection on normal human skin. Sorted keratinocytes had an early burst of upregulated gene expression, which included CCL20, IL-15, IL-23A, IFN-κ, and several antimicrobial peptides. Our results provide insight into the potential role of keratinocytes as contributors to cell-mediated inflammation, and expand knowledge about gene modulation that occurs during early wound healing. Our findings may be relevant to cutaneous diseases such as psoriasis, where micro-injury can trigger the formation of psoriatic plaques at the site of trauma.


Journal of Investigative Dermatology | 2012

A Single Intradermal Injection of IFN-γ Induces an Inflammatory State in Both Non-Lesional Psoriatic and Healthy Skin

Leanne M. Johnson-Huang; Mayte Suárez-Fariñas; Katherine C. Pierson; Judilyn Fuentes-Duculan; Inna Cueto; Tim Lentini; Mary Sullivan-Whalen; Patricia Gilleaudeau; James G. Krueger; Asifa S. Haider; Michelle A. Lowes

Psoriasis is a chronic, debilitating, immune-mediated inflammatory skin disease. As IFN-γ is involved in many cellular processes, including activation of dendritic cells (DCs), antigen processing and presentation, cell adhesion and trafficking, and cytokine and chemokine production, IFN-γ-producing Th1 cells were proposed to be integral to the pathogenesis of psoriasis. Recently, IFN-γ was shown to enhance IL-23 and IL-1 production by DCs and subsequently induce Th17 cells, important contributors to the inflammatory cascade in psoriasis lesions. To determine if IFN-γ indeed induces the pathways expressed in psoriasis lesions, a single intradermal injection of IFN-γ was administered to an area of clinically normal, non-lesional skin of psoriasis patients and biopsies were collected 24 hours later. Although there were no visible changes in the skin, IFN-γ induced many molecular and histological features characteristic of psoriasis lesions. IFN-γ increased a number of differentially expressed genes in the skin, including many chemokines concomitant with an influx of T cells and inflammatory DCs. Furthermore, inflammatory DC products TNF, iNOS, IL-23, and TRAIL were present in IFN-γ-treated skin. Thus, IFN-γ, which is significantly elevated in non-lesional skin compared to healthy skin, appears to be a key pathogenic cytokine that can induce many features of the inflammatory cascade of psoriasis.


Journal of Investigative Dermatology | 2013

TREM-1 as a Potential Therapeutic Target in Psoriasis

Luke A. Hyder; Juana Gonzalez; Jamie L. Harden; Leanne M. Johnson-Huang; Lisa C. Zaba; Katherine C. Pierson; Narat John Eungdamrong; Tim Lentini; Nicholas Gulati; Judilyn Fuentes-Duculan; Mayte Suárez-Fariñas; Michelle A. Lowes

Our group recently described a population of antigen presenting cells that appear to be critical in psoriasis pathogenesis, termed inflammatory myeloid dendritic cells (CD11c+ BDCA1−). Triggering receptor expressed on myeloid cells type-1 (TREM-1) Signaling was a major canonical pathway in the published transcriptome of these cells. TREM-1 is a member of the immunoglobulin superfamily, active through the DAP12 signaling pathway, with an unknown ligand. Activation through TREM-1 induces inflammatory cytokines including IL-8, MCP/CCL2 and TNF. We now show that TREM-1 was expressed in the skin of healthy and psoriatic patients, and there was increased soluble TREM-1 in the circulation of psoriasis patients. In psoriasis lesions, TREM-1 was co-localized with dendritic cells as well as CD31+ endothelial cells. TREM-1 expression was reduced with successful NB-UVB, etanercept and anti-IL-17 treatments. An in vitro model of PGN-activated monocytes as inflammatory myeloid DCs was developed to study TREM-1 blockade, and treatment with a TREM-1 blocking chimera decreased allogeneic Th17 activation as well as IL-17 production. Furthermore, TREM-1 blockade of ex vivo psoriatic dendritic cells in an alloMLR also showed a decrease in IL-17. Together, these data suggest that the TREM-1 signaling pathway may be a previously unidentified therapeutic target to prevent the effects of inflammatory myeloid DCs in psoriasis.


The Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology | 2016

The tryptophan metabolism enzyme L-kynureninase is a novel inflammatory factor in psoriasis and other inflammatory diseases

Jamie L. Harden; Steven M. Lewis; Samantha R. Lish; Mayte Suárez-Fariñas; Daniel Gareau; Tim Lentini; Leanne M. Johnson-Huang; James G. Krueger; Michelle A. Lowes

BACKGROUND Many human diseases arise from or have pathogenic contributions from a dysregulated immune response. One pathway with immunomodulatory ability is the tryptophan metabolism pathway, which promotes immune suppression through the enzyme indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase (IDO) and subsequent production of kynurenine. However, in patients with chronic inflammatory skin disease, such as psoriasis and atopic dermatitis (AD), another tryptophan metabolism enzyme downstream of IDO, L-kynureninase (KYNU), is heavily upregulated. The role of KYNU has not been explored in patients with these skin diseases or in general human immunology. OBJECTIVE We sought to explore the expression and potential immunologic function of the tryptophan metabolism enzyme KYNU in inflammatory skin disease and its potential contribution to general human immunology. METHODS Psoriatic skin biopsy specimens, as well as normal human skin, blood, and primary cells, were used to investigate the immunologic role of KYNU and tryptophan metabolites. RESULTS Here we show that KYNU(+) cells, predominantly of myeloid origin, infiltrate psoriatic lesional skin. KYNU expression positively correlates with disease severity and inflammation and is reduced on successful treatment of psoriasis or AD. Tryptophan metabolites downstream of KYNU upregulate several cytokines, chemokines, and cell adhesions. By mining data on several human diseases, we found that in patients with cancer, IDO is preferentially upregulated compared with KYNU, whereas in patients with inflammatory diseases, such as AD, KYNU is preferentially upregulated compared with IDO. CONCLUSION Our results suggest that tryptophan metabolism might dichotomously modulate immune responses, with KYNU as a switch between immunosuppressive versus inflammatory outcomes. Although tryptophan metabolism is increased in many human diseases, how tryptophan metabolism is proceeding might qualitatively affect the immune response in patients with that disease.


Journal of Investigative Dermatology | 2013

Gene Profiling of Narrowband UVB–Induced Skin Injury Defines Cellular and Molecular Innate Immune Responses

Milène Kennedy Crispin; Judilyn Fuentes-Duculan; Nicholas Gulati; Leanne M. Johnson-Huang; Tim Lentini; Mary Sullivan-Whalen; Patricia Gilleaudeau; Inna Cueto; Mayte Suárez-Fariñas; Michelle A. Lowes; James G. Krueger

The acute response of human skin to UVB radiation has not been fully characterized. We sought to define the cutaneous response at 24 hours following narrowband UVB (NB-UVB, 312-nm peak), a therapeutically relevant source of UVB, using transcriptional profiling, immunohistochemistry, and immunofluorescence. There were 1,522 unique differentially regulated genes, including upregulated genes encoding antimicrobial peptides (AMPs) (S100A7, S100A12, human beta-defensin 2, and elafin), as well as neutrophil and monocyte/dendritic cell (DC) chemoattractants (IL-8, CXCL1, CCL20, CCL2). Ingenuity pathway analysis demonstrated activation of innate defense and early adaptive immune pathways. Immunohistochemistry confirmed increased epidermal staining for AMPs (S100A7, S100A12, human beta-defensin 2, and elafin). Inflammatory myeloid CD11c(+)BDCA1(-) DCs were increased in irradiated skin, which were immature as shown by minimal colocalization with DC-LAMP, and coexpressed inflammatory markers tumor necrosis factor (TNF) and TNF-related apoptosis-inducing ligand in irradiated skin. There were increased BDCA3(+) DCs, a cross-presenting DC subtype with immunosuppressive functions, and these cells have not been previously characterized as part of the response to UVB. These results show that the acute response of human skin to erythemogenic doses of NB-UVB includes activation of innate defense mechanisms, as well as early infiltration of multiple subtypes of inflammatory DCs, which could serve as a link between innate and adaptive immunity.


PLOS ONE | 2012

Post-therapeutic relapse of psoriasis after CD11a blockade is associated with T cells and inflammatory myeloid DCs.

Leanne M. Johnson-Huang; Cara A. Pensabene; Kejal R. Shah; Katherine C. Pierson; Toyoko Kikuchi; Tim Lentini; Patricia Gilleaudeau; Mary Sullivan-Whalen; Inna Cueto; Artemis Khatcherian; Luke A. Hyder; Mayte Suárez-Fariñas; James G. Krueger; Michelle A. Lowes

To understand the development of new psoriasis lesions, we studied a group of moderate-to-severe psoriasis patients who experienced a relapse after ceasing efalizumab (anti-CD11a, Raptiva, Genentech). There were increased CD3+ T cells, neutrophils, CD11c+ and CD83+ myeloid dendritic cells (DCs), but no increase in CD1c+ resident myeloid DCs. In relapsed lesions, there were many CD11c+CD1c−, inflammatory myeloid DCs identified by TNFSF10/TRAIL, TNF, and iNOS. CD11c+ cells in relapsed lesions co-expressed CD14 and CD16 in situ. Efalizumab induced an improvement in many psoriasis genes, and during relapse, the majority of these genes reversed back to a lesional state. Gene Set Enrichment Analysis (GSEA) of the transcriptome of relapsed tissue showed that many of the gene sets known to be present in psoriasis were also highly enriched in relapse. Hence, on ceasing efalizumab, T cells and myeloid cells rapidly enter the skin to cause classic psoriasis. Trial registration Clinicaltrials.gov NCT00115076

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Mayte Suárez-Fariñas

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

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Michelle A. Lowes

Albert Einstein College of Medicine

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Tim Lentini

Rockefeller University

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