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Background: Skin eosinophilia is a common feature of allergic skin diseases, but it is unclear how epidermal and dermal eosinophil infiltration is controlled. To investigate regulation of localization of eosinophils in skin, we examined the regulatory mechanisms of expression of eosinophil-specific chemoattractants in dermal fibroblasts and epidermal keratinocytes.

Methods: We analyzed production of eotaxin, eotaxin-2, eotaxin-3 and galectin-9 by dermal fibroblasts and epidermal keratinocytes in response to several stimuli in vitro.

Results: Dermal fibroblasts produced eotaxin and eotaxin-3 in response to stimulation by interleukin (IL)-4 and/or tumor necrosis factor-[alpha]. Similarly, IL-4 stimulated epidermal keratinocytes to secrete eotaxin-3. However, we did not detect eotaxin mRNA expression or protein secretion by keratinocytes stimulated in vitro. Interferon (IFN)-[gamma] induced galectin-9 expression on dermal fibroblasts. Conversely, expression of galectin-9 on epidermal keratinocytes was dose-dependently inhibited by IFN-[gamma]. The immunohistochemical assays revealed that dermal fibroblasts (but not epidermal keratinocytes) in the lesional skin of psoriasis vulgaris (a Th1-polarized disease) express significant levels of galectin-9.

Conclusion: Eotaxin-3 contributes to dermal and epidermal eosinophil infiltration in Th2-polarized skin inflammation in which IL-4 is produced. In contrast, IFN-[gamma]-dominated inflammation appears to mediate eosinophil extravasation into the dermis and eosinophil adhesion to dermal fibroblasts via galectin-9 in association with decreased chemoattractant activity of epidermal galectin-9. The present results reveal a novel mechanism of dermal eosinophilia in IFN-[gamma]-mediated skin inflammation, and reflect concerted chemoattractant production involving dermal and/or epidermal eosinophilia during changes in the local cytokine profile.

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