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Dive into the research topics where Mathilde Pohin is active.

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Featured researches published by Mathilde Pohin.


European Journal of Immunology | 2015

IMQ-induced skin inflammation in mice is dependent on IL-1R1 and MyD88 signaling but independent of the NLRP3 inflammasome.

Hanitriniaina Rabeony; Mathilde Pohin; Philippe Vasseur; Isabelle Petit-Paris; Jean-François Jégou; Laure Favot; Eric Frouin; Marie-Astrid Boutet; Frédéric Blanchard; Dieudonnée Togbe; Bernhard Ryffel; François-Xavier Bernard; Jean-Claude Lecron; Franck Morel

The pathogenesis of inflammatory skin diseases such as psoriasis involves the release of numerous proinflammatory cytokines, including members of the IL‐1 family. Here we report overexpression of IL‐1α, IL‐1β, and IL‐1 receptor antagonist mRNA, associated to expression of IL‐23p19, IL‐17A, and IL‐22 in skin cells, upon topical application of the TLR7 agonist imiquimod (IMQ) in C57BL/6J mice. IMQ‐induced skin inflammation was partially reduced in mice deficient for both IL‐1α/IL‐1β or for IL‐1 receptor type 1 (IL‐1R1), but not in IL‐1α‐ or IL‐1β‐deficient mice, demonstrating the redundant activity of IL‐1α and IL‐1β for skin inflammation. NLRP3 or apoptosis‐associated Speck‐like protein containing a Caspase recruitment domain‐deficient mice had no significant reduction of skin inflammation in response to IMQ treatment, mainly due to the redundancy of IL‐1α. However, IMQ‐induced skin inflammation was abolished in the absence of MyD88, the adaptor protein shared by IL‐1R and TLR signaling pathways. These results are consistent with the TLR7 dependence of IMQ‐induced skin inflammation. Thus, IL‐1R1 contributes to the IMQ‐induced skin inflammation, and disruption of MyD88 signaling completely abrogates this response.


European Journal of Immunology | 2016

Oncostatin M overexpression induces skin inflammation but is not required in the mouse model of imiquimod-induced psoriasis-like inflammation

Mathilde Pohin; William Guesdon; Adela Andrine Tagne Mekouo; Hanitriniaina Rabeony; Isabelle Paris; Hristo Atanassov; Laure Favot; Jiad N. Mcheik; François-Xavier Bernard; Carl D. Richards; Jérôme Amiaud; Frédéric Blanchard; Jean-Claude Lecron; Franck Morel; Jean-François Jégou

Oncostatin M (OSM) has been reported to be overexpressed in psoriasis skin lesions and to exert proinflammatory effects in vitro on human keratinocytes. Here, we report the proinflammatory role of OSM in vivo in a mouse model of skin inflammation induced by intradermal injection of murine OSM‐encoding adenovirus (AdOSM) and compare with that induced by IL‐6 injection. Here, we show that OSM potently regulates the expression of genes involved in skin inflammation and epidermal differentiation in murine primary keratinocytes. In vivo, intradermal injection of AdOSM in mouse ears provoked robust skin inflammation with epidermal thickening and keratinocyte proliferation, while minimal effect was observed after AdIL‐6 injection. OSM overexpression in the skin increased the expression of the S100A8/9 antimicrobial peptides, CXCL3, CCL2, CCL5, CCL20, and Th1/Th2 cytokines, in correlation with neutrophil and macrophage infiltration. In contrast, OSM downregulated the expression of epidermal differentiation genes, such as cytokeratin‐10 or filaggrin. Collectively, these results support the proinflammatory role of OSM when it is overexpressed in the skin. However, OSM expression was not required in the murine model of psoriasis induced by topical application of imiquimod, as demonstrated by the inflammatory phenotype of OSM‐deficient mice or wild‐type mice treated with anti‐OSM antibodies.


American Journal of Pathology | 2016

High-Fat Diet–Induced IL-17A Exacerbates Psoriasiform Dermatitis in a Mouse Model of Steatohepatitis

Philippe Vasseur; Laura Serres; Jean-François Jégou; Mathilde Pohin; Adriana Delwail; Isabelle Petit-Paris; Pierre Levillain; Laure Favot; Michel Samson; Hans Yssel; Franck Morel; Christine Silvain; Jean-Claude Lecron

Recent studies suggest that psoriasis may be more severe in patients with nonalcoholic fatty liver disease, particularly in those with the inflammatory stage of steatohepatitis [nonalcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH)]. Herein, we investigated the impact of diet-induced steatohepatitis on the severity of imiquimod-induced psoriasiform dermatitis. Mice fed with a high-fat diet developed steatohepatitis reminiscent of human NASH with ballooning hepatocytes and significant liver fibrosis. Mice with steatohepatitis also displayed moderate cutaneous inflammation characterized by erythema, dermal infiltrates of CD45(+) leukocytes, and a local production of IL-17A. Moreover, steatohepatitis was associated with an epidermal activation of caspase-1 and cutaneous overexpression of IL-1β. Imiquimod-induced psoriasiform dermatitis was exacerbated in mice with steatohepatitis as compared to animals fed with a standard diet. Scale formation and acanthosis were aggravated, in correlation with increased IL-17A and IL-22 expression in inflamed skins. Finally, intradermal injection of IL-17A in standard diet-fed mice recapitulated the cutaneous pathology of mice with steatohepatitis. The results show that high-fat diet-induced steatohepatitis aggravates the inflammation in psoriasiform dermatitis, via the cutaneous production of IL-17A. In agreement with clinical data, this description of a novel extrahepatic manifestation of NASH should sensitize dermatologists to the screening and the management of fatty liver in psoriatic patients.


British Journal of Dermatology | 2018

Liver fibrosis is associated with cutaneous inflammation in the imiquimod‐induced murine model of psoriasiform dermatitis

Philippe Vasseur; Mathilde Pohin; Jean-François Jégou; Laure Favot; N. Venisse; Jiad N. Mcheik; F. Morel; Jean-Claude Lecron; Christine Silvain

Psoriasis exhibits several extracutaneous manifestations. Little is known about hepatic parameters specifically associated with psoriasis.


PLOS ONE | 2017

Interleukin-17A-induced production of acute serum amyloid A by keratinocytes contributes to psoriasis pathogenesis

E. Couderc; Franck Morel; Pierre Levillain; Amandine Buffière-Morgado; Magalie Camus; Camille Paquier; Charles Bodet; Jean-François Jégou; Mathilde Pohin; Laure Favot; Martine Garcia; V. Huguier; Jiad N. Mcheik; Corinne Lacombe; Hans Yssel; G. Guillet; François-Xavier Bernard; Jean-Claude Lecron

Background Acute-serum Amyloid A (A-SAA), one of the major acute-phase proteins, is mainly produced in the liver but extra-hepatic synthesis involving the skin has been reported. Its expression is regulated by the transcription factors NF-κB, C/EBPβ, STAT3 activated by proinflammatory cytokines. Objectives We investigated A-SAA synthesis by resting and cytokine-activated Normal Human Epidermal Keratinocytes (NHEK), and their inflammatory response to A-SAA stimulation. A-SAA expression was also studied in mouse skin and liver in a model mimicking psoriasis and in the skin and sera of psoriatic and atopic dermatitis (AD) patients. Methods NHEK were stimulated by A-SAA or the cytokines IL-1α, IL-17A, IL-22, OSM, TNF-α alone or in combination, previously reported to reproduce features of psoriasis. Murine skins were treated by imiquimod cream. Human skins and sera were obtained from patients with psoriasis and AD. A-SAA mRNA was quantified by RT qPCR. A-SAA proteins were dosed by ELISA or immunonephelemetry assay. Results IL-1α, TNF-α and mainly IL-17A induced A-SAA expression by NHEK. A-SAA induced its own production and the synthesis of hBD2 and CCL20, both ligands for CCR6, a chemokine receptor involved in the trafficking of Th17 lymphocytes. A-SAA expression was increased in skins and livers from imiquimod-treated mice and in patient skins with psoriasis, but not significantly in those with AD. Correlations between A-SAA and psoriasis severity and duration were observed. Conclusion Keratinocytes could contribute to psoriasis pathogenesis via A-SAA production, maintaining a cutaneous inflammatory environment, activating innate immunity and Th17 lymphocyte recruitment.


Journal of Tissue Engineering and Regenerative Medicine | 2018

Development of a new model of reconstituted mouse epidermis and characterization of its response to proinflammatory cytokines

Mathilde Pohin; Carolina Veaute; Julien Garnier; Christine Barrault; Laurent Cronier; V. Huguier; Laure Favot; Jiad N. Mcheik; François-Xavier Bernard; Jean-Claude Lecron; Franck Morel; Jean-François Jégou

The development of three‐dimensional models of reconstituted mouse epidermis (RME) has been hampered by the difficulty to maintain murine primary keratinocyte cultures and to achieve a complete epidermal stratification. In this study, a new protocol is proposed for the rapid and convenient generation of RME, which reproduces accurately the architecture of a normal mouse epidermis. During RME morphogenesis, the expression of differentiation markers such as keratins, loricrin, filaggrin, E‐cadherin and connexins was followed, showing that RME structure at day 5 was similar to those of a normal mouse epidermis, with the acquisition of the natural barrier function. It was also demonstrated that RME responded to skin‐relevant proinflammatory cytokines by increasing the expression of antimicrobial peptides and chemokines, and inhibiting epidermal differentiation markers, as in the human system. This new model of RME is therefore suitable to investigate mouse epidermis physiology further and opens new perspectives to generate reconstituted epidermis from transgenic mice.


Journal of Investigative Dermatology | 2016

099 Establishment of a reconstituted mouse epidermis model to characterize the response to proinflammatory cytokines

Mathilde Pohin; C.M. Veaute; J. Garnier; C. Barrault; Laurent Cronier; F. Bernard; Jean-Claude Lecron; F. Morel; Jean-François Jégou


Annales De Dermatologie Et De Venereologie | 2016

Développement d’un modèle d’épiderme reconstruit murin : caractérisation histologique et réponse aux cytokines proinflammatoires

Mathilde Pohin; Carolina Veaute; Julien Garnier; Christine Barrault; Laurent Cronier; Laure Favot; François-Xavier Bernard; Jean-Claude Lecron; Franck Morel; Jean-François Jégou


Annales De Dermatologie Et De Venereologie | 2015

Stéatohépatite non alcoolique, IL-17A et psoriasis : un ménage à trois délétère ?

P. Vasseur; L. Serres; I. Petit-Paris; Jean-François Jégou; Mathilde Pohin; Adriana Delwail; F. Morel; C. Silvain; Jean-Claude Lecron


Annales De Dermatologie Et De Venereologie | 2015

Mise au point d’épidermes reconstruits chez la souris: analyse de l’expression des Toll-Like Receptors et réponse aux cytokines pro-inflammatoires

Mathilde Pohin; Christine Barrault; Julien Garnier; Laurent Cronier; Laure Favot; François Xavier Bernard; Jean-Claude Lecron; F. Morel; Jean-François Jégou

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Laure Favot

University of Poitiers

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F. Morel

University of Poitiers

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