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Title: Thymus- and activation-regulated chemokine (TARC/CCL17) induces a Th2-dominated inflammatory reaction on intradermal injection in mice. Author: Vestergaard C, Deleuran M, Gesser B, Larsen CG. Journal: Exp Dermatol; 2004 Apr; 13(4):265-71. PubMed ID: 15086343. Abstract: TARC/CCL17 (thymus- and activation-regulated chemokine) is a CC chemokine, which binds to the CC chemokine receptor-4 (CCR4) known to be distinctively expressed on Th2 lymphocytes. In atopic dermatitis (AD), the skin is invaded by Th2 lymphocytes in the acute phase. TARC/CCL17 is produced by the keratinocytes in AD lesions, and CCR4 is overexpressed on CLA+ (cutaneous lymphocyte-associated antigen) lymphocytes in the skin and blood. We, therefore, hypothesized that TARC/CCL17 is pivotal in mediating a Th2-dominated inflammation in the skin. To examine this, we injected BALB/c mice with murine TARC/CCL17 in concentrations ranging from 0.1 microg/ml to 10 microg/ml and examined the skin after 48 h. This revealed that TARC/CCL17 induces lymphocytic infiltration of the skin by CD4+ lymphocytes in a dose-dependent manner with a maximum response at 1 microg/ml. Additionally, TARC/CCL17 induced interleukin-4 mRNA but not interferon-gamma mRNA expression in the skin, suggesting that the lymphocytes invading the skin are Th2 cells. Additionally, TARC/CCL17 induced its own production in the keratinocytes along with cutaneous T-cell-attracting chemokine (CTACK/CCL27) mRNA. We, therefore, conclude that TARC/CCL17 induces a Th2-dominated inflammatory reaction when injected into the skin.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]