γδ T cells and Scavenger receptors are key parts of the innate immune machinery, playing significant roles in regulating immune homeostasis at the epithelial surface. The roles of these immune components are not yet characterized for the autoimmune skin disorder Pemphigus vulgaris (PV). Phenotyping and frequency of γδ T cells estimated by flow cytometry have shown increased frequency of γδ T cells (6·7% versus 4·4%) producing interferon- γ (IFN-γ; 35·2% versus 26·68%) in the circulation of patients compared with controls. Dual cytokine-secreting (IFN-γ and interleukin-4) γδ T cells indicate the plasticity of these cells. The γδ T cells of patients with PV have shown higher cytotoxic potential and the higher frequency of γδ T cells producing IFN-γ shows T helper type 1 polarization. The increased expression of Scavenger receptors expression (CD36 and CD163) could be contributing to the elevated inflammatory environment and immune imbalance in this disease. Targeting the inflammatory γδ T cells and Scavenger receptors may pave the way for novel therapeutics.
Keywords: Pemphigus vulgaris; T helper type 1 polarization; cytotoxicity assay; scavenger receptors; γδ T cells.
© 2017 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.