Transcriptomic Profiling of Plaque Psoriasis and Cutaneous T-Cell Subsets during Treatment with Secukinumab

JID Innov. 2021 Dec 30;2(3):100094. doi: 10.1016/j.xjidi.2021.100094. eCollection 2022 May.

Abstract

The IL-17A inhibitor secukinumab is efficacious for the treatment of psoriasis. To better understand its mechanism of action, we investigated its impact on psoriatic lesions from 15 patients with moderate-to-severe plaque psoriasis undergoing secukinumab treatment. We characterized the longitudinal transcriptomic changes of whole lesional skin tissue as well as cutaneous CD4+ and CD8+ T effector cells and CD4+ T regulatory cells across 12 weeks of treatment. Secukinumab was clinically effective and reduced disease-associated overexpression of IL17A , IL17F, IL23A, IL23R, and IFNG in whole tissue as soon as 2 weeks after initiation of treatment. IL17A overexpression in T-cell subsets, primarily CD8+ T cells, was also reduced. Although secukinumab treatment resolved 89‒97% of psoriasis-associated expression differences in bulk tissue and T-cell subsets by week 12 of treatment, we observed expression differences involved in IFN signaling and metallothionein synthesis that remained unresolved at this time point as well as potential treatment-associated expression differences involved in IL-15 signaling. These changes were accompanied by shifts in broader immune cell composition on the basis of deconvolution of RNA-sequencing data. In conclusion, our study reveals several phenotypic and cellular changes within the lesion that underlie clinical improvement from secukinumab.

Keywords: CD8, CD8+ effector T cell; DE, differentially expressed; FDR, false discovery rate; PCA, principal component analysis; PGA, Physician’s Global Assessment; RNA-seq, RNA sequencing; Teff, effector T cell; Th, T helper; Treg, regulatory T cell.