Solar-simulated Ultraviolet Irradiation Induces Selective Influx of CD4+ T Lymphocytes in Normal Human Skin |
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Authors: | Sergio Di Nuzzo Menno A. de Rie Chris M. van der Loos Jan D. Bos Marcel B. M. Teunissen |
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Affiliation: | Department of Dermatology and department of Cardiovascular Pathology, University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam, the Netherlands |
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Abstract: | Abstract— The proportion and composition of the human cutaneous CD3+ T lymphocyte population was determined in situ following a single exposure to physiological, erythema-inducing doses of simulated solar radiation, mainly consisting of UV radiation. Biopsies were taken 1, 2 and 7 days after local irradiation of normal volunteers with 1,2 and 4 MED by a xenonarc lamp and immunohistochemistry was performed on cryostat sections. Ultraviolet radiation caused an initial decrease of intraepidermal CD3+ T-cell numbers or even could lead to T-cell depletion 24 and 48 h postirradiation, and this was followed by an infiltration of T cells in the epidermis as determined 1 week after UV exposure. The number of dermal CD3+ T ceDs was increased 24 h after irradiation, reached a maximum at 48 h and subsequently declined at day 7, though remained significantly higher than the unirradiated control Double staining demonstrated that the CD3+ T cells, which immigrated into the (epi)dermis upon UV exposure, coexpressed CD4 but not CD8. Therefore the CD4/CD8 ratio in skin was markedly increased during the first week upon UV exposure. Our time course study shows that UV radiation affects die T-cell population within human skin by depleting the majority of epidermal T cells and initiating a selective influx of CD4+ T cells. |
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