Pathological Mechanisms Involved in Epidermolysis Bullosa Simplex: Current Knowledge and Therapeutic Perspectives
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. EBS Gene Expression Profile Studies
2.1. Increase of Inflammation Components
2.1.1. c-Jun N-Terminal Kinase (JNK) Stress Pathway
2.1.2. IFN-γ Inflammatory Signaling Pathway
2.1.3. Phosphatidylinositol 3-Kinase (PI3K)-Protein Kinase B (Akt)-mTOR Pathway
2.1.4. Wnt-Receptor Signaling Pathway
2.1.5. Bone Morphogenetic Proteins Signaling (BMPs)
2.1.6. T Helper Type 17 (Th17) Immune Response
2.2. Keratins and Cell-Junction Components
3. Strategies to Improve and Alleviate EBS Manifestations
3.1. Therapeutic Molecules: Anti-Inflammatory
3.1.1. Tetracycline Antibiotics
3.1.2. Diacerein
3.1.3. Humanized IFN-γ Blocking Antibody
3.1.4. mTOR Inhibitors
3.1.5. 4-Phenyl Butyric Acid (4-PBA)
3.1.6. Apremilast (Anti-IL-17 Agent)
3.1.7. Afatinib (Epidermal Growth Factor Receptor (EGFR) Inhibitor)
3.2. Therapeutic Molecules: Beyond Anti-Inflammatory Mechanisms
3.2.1. Aluminium Chloride Hexahydrate
3.2.2. Botulinum Toxins (BoNT)
3.2.3. Parthenolide (PN)
3.2.4. PKC412 Kinase Inhibition
Molecule | Reference | Type of Study | Patients | Vehicle | Target | Outcomes | Perspectives |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
4-PBA | [62] | In vitro | EBS-loc, EBS-sev | 1 mM solution | Immortalized keratinocytes | Reduction of keratin aggregates upon heat shock | Reversing protein aggregates and reducing tissue fragility |
[63] | In vitro | EBS-sev | 1 mM solution | Immortalized keratinocytes | Reduction of keratin aggregates and amelioration of inflammatory phenotype | Assay with low doses to avoid toxicity | |
[23] | In vitro | EBS-sev | 1 μM solution | Keratinocytes | Reduction of around 40% of keratin aggregates | Reversing protein aggregates and reducing tissue fragility | |
Afatinib | [69] | In vitro | EBS-sev | 1 μM solution | Immortalized keratinocytes | Reduction of keratin aggregates, induction of quiescent state to cells | Optimize afatinib for therapy (reduce adverse side effects when used in cancer therapy) |
Aluminium chloride hexahydrate | [70] | Case report | EBS-loc | 20% in alcohol | Feet | Prevent new blisters | Study other cases to establish a pattern of efficiency |
[71] | Case report | EBS-loc | 20% in alcohol | Hands and feet | Prevent new blisters | Study other cases to establish a pattern of efficiency | |
[72] | Therapeutic assay | EBS-loc | 20% in alcohol | Feet | No significant reduction of blisters | Study the effect on more severe subtypes | |
Apremilast | [26] | Therapeutic assay | EBS-sev | Oral treatment (10 mg/day to 30 mg twice/day) | Skin | Rapid and sustained (7–10 months) improvement in skin lesions | Trial with a higher number of patients (placebo–control) |
Botulinum toxins | [74] | Case report | EBS-loc | 100 U BTX-A (Botox) in saline | Feet | 65% reduction in blister surface area, decrease in pain and perspiration | Trial with a higher number of patients (placebo–control), testing higher concentration of the molecule |
[75] | Therapeutic assay | EBS-loc, EBS-sev | 170–700 U BTX-A (Dysport) in saline, 2500 U BTX-B (Neurobloc) in saline | Feet | Improvement in blistering and pedal pain | Trial with a higher number of patients (placebo–control) | |
[76] | Case report | EBS | 100 U BTX-A (Botox) in saline | Feet | Reduction of blisters, smaller blisters, decreased pedal pain and odor | Treatment for pain management and improved quality of life | |
Diacerein | [30] | In vitro | EBS-sev | 10 μg mL−1 solution | Keratinocytes | Stabilization of the IF network and reduction of inflammatory components | Trial with EBS-sev patients |
[52] | Therapeutic assay | EBS-sev | 1% cream | Armpits | Reduction of blisters | Trial with a higher number of patients | |
[53] | Phase 2/3 clinical trial | EBS-sev | 1% cream | Skin | More than 40% reduction in blister number | Trial with a higher number of patients and more invasive data acquisition | |
[54] | Therapeutic assay | EBS-sev, EBS-intermed | 1% cream | Skin | No significant improvement compared with vehicule cream alone | Focus on EBS-sev individuals with a bigger sample size | |
Doxycycline | [14] | In vivo | K5−/− mice | 50 μg/mL solution with 5% sucrose | Skin | Downregulation of MMPP13 and IL-1β | Screening similar compounds for additional targets |
INF-γ blocking antibodies | [34] | In vitro | Cell model of EBS-sev | Humanized monoclonal antibody | Keratinocytes | Reversing effect of IFN-γ (less keratin aggregates, restored cell proliferation, increased cell–cell adhesion, accelerated wound closure) | Promising therapy for patients with EBS or other skin disease (in vivo assays) |
mTOR inhibitors | [24] | Therapeutic assay | EBS | 2% sirolimus ointment | Feet | Reduction of blisters and keratoderma | Drug repositioning based on transcriptomic signature in EBS |
Parthenolide | [78] | In vitro | Mice cell model of EBS | 5 µM solution | Keratinocytes | Increasing cell adhesion and resistance to mechanical stress | Trials with keratinocytes of patients to assess efficiency |
PKC412 kinase inhibitor | [81] | In vitro | EBS-sev | 1 µM solution | Immortalized keratinocytes | Reduction of 40% of keratin aggregates and strengthening of cellular cohesion | Pretesting on animal models and skin explants before oral or topic administration in EBS patients |
Tetracycline | [49] | Therapeutic assay | EBS-sev | Oral treatment (1500 mg/day) | Skin | Reduction of blisters and less fragile epidermis (dose-dependant response) | Trial with a higher number of patients |
3.3. Genome Editing Approaches
3.3.1. RNA Trans-Splicing
3.3.2. Transcription Activator-like Effector Nucleases (TALENS)
3.3.3. CRISPR-Cas9
4. Why Therapeutic Approaches Are Difficult to Find in Epidermolysis Bullosa?
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Reference | Model/Cell Lines | Upregulated Genes | Downregulated Genes | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
[14] | WT mouse skin vs. K5-−/− mouse skin | Gene symbol | Method | Gene symbol | Method |
CXCL1, CXCL2, HPRT, KRT6a | MA | ||||
IL6, IL1-β | MA, RTq-PCR | ||||
[16] | WT vs. EBS-sev KEB-7 | ACTN1, AJAP1, CDH2, CDKN2A, CST6, DBN1, FLNB, FN1, GNA11, IGSF4, KIAA0992, KRT18, KRT8, KRTHB1, LMNB2, MYL9, PODXL, PRSS2, RHOA, TGM2, TNC, TPM2, TUBB2, VIM | MA | ABLIM1, AMOTL2, ANXA1, ARHGDIB, CLDN4, COL17A1, CSTA, CTGF, CXADR, DDR1, DST, EGFR, ENC1, FRMD4B, GABARAPL1, GPNMB, HSPB1, IL18, IL8, KRT13, KRT15, KRT16, KRT19, KRT5, LPXN, LY6D, MTSS1, OLR1, PCDH7, PDLIM1, PDZK3, PFN2, RND3, SAA1, SCEL, SLC9A3R1, SNCG, PRR1B, STEAP1, TSPAN1 | MA |
CDH1, GJB5, ITGA6, LAMA5, LAMB3, PPL | MA, RTq-PCR | ||||
CLDN3, CLDN7, DSC2, PKP1 | RTq-PCR | ||||
DSG3, GJA1, JUP | MA, RTq-PCR, WB, IF | ||||
DSP | MA, WB, IF | ||||
WT vs. EBS-sev KEB-1 | GJA1, DSG3, DSP, JUP | WB | |||
WT vs. EBS-loc KEB-4 | ACTA2, AJAP1, ANK3, CLDN3, CLDN7, GSN, KRT14, KRT15, KRT16, KRT17, KRT4, LGALS7, HLA-B, HLA-C, NEFH | MA | PCDH7, BASP1, CTGF, CYR61, DST, ENC1, FRMD4B, IL18, KRT19, LPXN, OLR1, RDX, RND3, STK6 | MA | |
[17] | WT mouse skin vs. K5−/− mouse skin | MCP-1, CCL2, MIP-3a/CCL20, MIP-3b/CCL19, CXCL16 | |||
[18] | WT vs. EBS-sev KEB-7 | ACSL3, ANXA2, ARPC3, CAV1, CCT5, EEF1G, EIF1, ENO1, GLUD1, H2AFZ, HNRPDL, SP90AB1, MAN2A1, PDCD4, RAB27B, RPL13, RPL19, RPL23A, RPL28, RPL31, RPL4, RPL5, RPL7A, RPLP0, RPS18, RPS2, PS25, RPS3, RPS4X, RPS6, RPS8, SFN, TAX1BP1, TMBIM6, TPI1, TPT1, EEF1A1, GSN, HNRNPA1, KRT5, KRT6A | SSH | ||
ANXA8, DDIT4, DSG3, DSP, F3, KRT14, KRT16, KRT17, KRT6B, MALAT1, PERP, TXNIP, UBE2K, YWHAZ | SSH, RTq-PCR | ||||
[20] | WT human epidermis tissue vs. EBS-sev and EBS-loc human epidermis tissue | SPRR2B, AREG, BDP1, NR4A2, GAL, LYVE1, PSG4, H19, PDE6A, C5orf27, THRSP, FAR2, AADACL3, CRAT, AGR2, IGFL4, KLK6, PM20D1, ATP12A, FSIP2 | MA | ||
AWAT2, DGAT2L6, FADS2, ACSBG1, SPRR4, KRT79 | MA, RTq-PCR | ||||
ELOVL3 | MA, RTq-PCR, WB | ||||
WT human epidermis vs. EBS-sev human epidermis | FADS1, CYP4F8, AWAT1, ALOX15B, ACSM3, SOAT1, SLC27A2, HAO2, INSIG1, KRTAP5-8, KRT25, KRT71, KRT74, KRT27, TCHH, CHI3L1, MUC1, SLCO4C1, TGIF2LX, IGLJ3, IGJ, IGHA1, TMEM56, LRCC37A2, THRSP, FAR2, AADACL3, CRAT, AGR2, IGFL4, KLK6, PM20D1, ATP12A, FSIP2 | ||||
AWAT2, DGAT2L6, FADS2, ACSBG1, SPRR4, KRT79 | MA, RTq-PCR | ||||
ELOVL3 | MA, RTq-PCR, WB | ||||
[30] | WT immortalized keratinocytes vs. immortalized EBS-sev cell lines (KEB-7, EBDM-1) | KRT14,IL-1b, KRT6A | SqRT-PCR | ||
[21] | WT immortalized keratinocytes vs. immortalized EBS-sev cell lines (KEB-7, EBDM-1) | KLK6, KLK8, KLK10, KLK11, KLK13, KLK14, MMP1, MMP13, WIPF1, ARHGEF4, ARHGEF37, CDC42BPG, KRT6B | MA | ||
KLK5, KLK7, KRT14, KRT15, KRT16 KRT17, KRT5 | MA, sqRT-PCR, WB | ||||
MMP7, MMP9, MMP19, ARHGEF9, DSC1, DSC2, DSC3, DSG1, DSG3, DSG4, GJA1, GJB2, GJB6, CXCL1, CXCL8/IL-8, CXCL14 | MA, sqRT-PCR | ||||
[22] | WT vs. EBS-sev KEB-7 | KGFLP1, ANKRD2, PIK3R3, PTPN20A, FAM21A, APBB2, DUOX1, ZNF627, MCOLN2, APOB, AJAP1, BNC2, LOC100652860, FKTN, TMEM204, BMS1P1, MAN1A1, STOX1, RPL10, CDC144C, NOX5EVC2, PTPN20C, PTPN20B, NID1, ASAH2, FLJ20444, TP53INP1, FRG1B, MSLN, DENND1B, IFFO2, STRBP, DSEL, AOX1, LRP12, ADHFE1, FAM21D, SNORD64, FAM21A, EFEMP1, TSPYL5, RNF212, DDX43, ZNF136, CCDC144A, CCDC144A, ZNF700, BGN, H2AFY2, SNORD116-21, HOXA9, RPS23 | MA | MIR492, H19, EYA4, TMPRSS15, ITGBL1, EDIL3, CDR1, NEFL, SMOC2, GHR, TFPI2, ARHGAP28, NNMT, SOX2, HIST1H, PCCA, ZNF570, CDK14, MEST, CYP7B1, GALNTL4, CRIP2, IPO7, SAAL1, KRTCAP3, FAM159A, EYA1, CDC25B, NKX2-6, HTATIP2, ILK, ACSF2, PDZD2, CENPH, TOX, VSTM2L, SYT17, SLC7A2, IKZF3 | MA |
TDRD12, NEFH, NLRP2, KLK5, ENPP1, ZFP42, DKK1, CYYR1, C10orf99, SYCP2, PRICKLE1, SLC44A5, PLA2G7, MOXD1, WNT5A, WISP3, ARHGEF9, HSD17B11, ADAMTSL3, FAM102B SGMS1, ARHGAP29, SLC15A2, ROBO1, ERCC6, NREP, KIAA1324L, ROR1, ZFAND4, SELENBP1, NF334 PTPN20C, IRX4, PTPN20A, PNMAL1, NID1, ZNF32, AHI1, ELAVL2, SLC16A9, FAM25A, MAPK8, CDC14B, GABPB2 TCHH, LMF1, CSTF2T, SGK1, UAP1, POPDC2, ZNF502 | MA, RTq-PCR | KRT19, KYNU, PDZK1, OLFM4, SLC38A4, BST2, PPARGC1A, GALNT5, FKBP10, GIPC2, AMOT, ZNF114, CLEC2B, FAM198B, SLC2A3, CAPNS2, TBX18, LRCH2, NEFM, CPT1C, ZNF43, LY75, GLDC, TMTC1, SLCO1B3, SLC6A14, SLC24A3, EPSTI1, SATB2, HSD17B2, AKR1B10, GPC3, IFITM3, HOXD10, MSX2, IL17RB, BLMH, SLC9A2, CPNE1, WDR17, RB1, DPYD, PRTFDC1, GLRX, PPP1R16B, GTF2H2D, REPS2, GPR143, GTF2H2, CYP7B1, BCL11A, MERTK, PRDM5, ACOXL, AHCY, ARMCX2, PAX6, HOXD11, SMARCA1, IFI44L, PITRM1, NAP1L5, PIGU | MA, RTq-PCR | ||
[23] | WT human keratinocytes vs. EBS-loc and EBS-intermed keratinocytes | ACOT1, ALDH1A3, ALOX15B, ALPL 6, ANGPTL4, ASPN 34, ATP6V0A4, BEX1, C6orf223, CARD17, CCDC9B, CCL2, CCL20, CD99L2, CNIH3, CNTN3, COL1A1, COL6A6, CRYBB2P1, CXCL10, CXCL11, CXCL5, CXCL6, CYP1A1, DAAM2, DLK1, ECHDC1, ELN, FIBIN, FMOD, FNDC1, G0S2, GALNT14, GALNT16, HLA-DRB1, HMGB3, HS3ST2, HSD17B2, IER3, IFI27, IFI44, IL1A, IL1B, IL7R, INHBA, INSYN2B, ITGA10, ITGBL1, KRT6B, LAMB3, LIF, LINC00520, LINC-PINT, LOC100996732, LOX14, LSP1P4, LSP1P5, MANCR, MFAP4, MT1L, MX2, NFIX, NOV, NPAS2, NPIPB12, NPIPB13, NPIPB3, NPIPB5, NUPR1, LFML2B, PCDHA6, PDGFRB, PLD5, POSTN, PTGS1, RTEL1-TNFRSF6B, SAA1, SAA2, SAA2-SAA4, SERPINB2, SFRP2, SLC9A7, SMOC1, SMOC2, ST6GAL2, SYNDIG1, TAC1, TAGLN, TFCP2L1, TMEM255B, TNFRSF6B, TNMD, TPST1, TRNP1, VNN1, WIPI1, XDH | RNA seq |
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Bchetnia, M.; Powell, J.; McCuaig, C.; Boucher-Lafleur, A.-M.; Morin, C.; Dupéré, A.; Laprise, C. Pathological Mechanisms Involved in Epidermolysis Bullosa Simplex: Current Knowledge and Therapeutic Perspectives. Int. J. Mol. Sci. 2024, 25, 9495. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms25179495
Bchetnia M, Powell J, McCuaig C, Boucher-Lafleur A-M, Morin C, Dupéré A, Laprise C. Pathological Mechanisms Involved in Epidermolysis Bullosa Simplex: Current Knowledge and Therapeutic Perspectives. International Journal of Molecular Sciences. 2024; 25(17):9495. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms25179495
Chicago/Turabian StyleBchetnia, Mbarka, Julie Powell, Catherine McCuaig, Anne-Marie Boucher-Lafleur, Charles Morin, Audrey Dupéré, and Catherine Laprise. 2024. "Pathological Mechanisms Involved in Epidermolysis Bullosa Simplex: Current Knowledge and Therapeutic Perspectives" International Journal of Molecular Sciences 25, no. 17: 9495. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms25179495