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Keratinocyte-specific H4K12 lactylation drives a non-canonical IL-17-dependent signaling in psoriasis progression in mice

Author

Listed:
  • Xuecheng Shen

    (163 Xianlin Avenue)

  • Wenxuan Qiao

    (163 Xianlin Avenue)

  • Wei Yan

    (Sichuan University)

  • Hao Xie

    (Southeast University)

  • Chenyang Zhang

    (163 Xianlin Avenue)

  • Yang Sun

    (163 Xianlin Avenue)

  • Qiong Luo

    (163 Xianlin Avenue)

  • Qiang Xu

    (163 Xianlin Avenue
    Nanjing University of Chinese Medicine)

Abstract

IL-17 signaling contributes to the pathogenesis of psoriasis; however, IL-17 involvement in keratinocyte hyperactivation of epidermis remains unclear. Here, we describe an IL-17A-induced, skin-specific, positive feedback loop, which operates independently of canonical chemokine production, thus untangling skin inflammation and epithelial hyperproliferation in psoriasis. We show that IL-17A-induced, keratinocyte-specific KLK8 interacts with IL-17R to promote histone H4 lysine lactylation (H4K12la) catalyzed by the acetyltransferase HAT1. H4K12la further promotes IL-17A-mediated keratinocyte proliferation and the expression of KLK8 and IL-17R, creating a feedback loop that drives psoriasis progression. Importantly, excessive lactate in the microenvironment exacerbates H4K12la and psoriasis severity, thereby impairing the efficacy of anti-IL-17A antibody. Silencing KLK8, HAT1, or inhibiting lactate accumulation attenuates psoriasis in mice. Moreover, combining lactylation inhibition with anti-IL-17A therapy exhibits synergistic effects against antibody-resistant psoriasis. Thus, our findings unveil a lactylation-driven, keratinocyte-specific IL-17A signaling and offer a promising approach for psoriasis treatment, particularly in patients with comorbid metabolic syndrome.

Suggested Citation

  • Xuecheng Shen & Wenxuan Qiao & Wei Yan & Hao Xie & Chenyang Zhang & Yang Sun & Qiong Luo & Qiang Xu, 2025. "Keratinocyte-specific H4K12 lactylation drives a non-canonical IL-17-dependent signaling in psoriasis progression in mice," Nature Communications, Nature, vol. 16(1), pages 1-19, December.
  • Handle: RePEc:nat:natcom:v:16:y:2025:i:1:d:10.1038_s41467-025-63791-7
    DOI: 10.1038/s41467-025-63791-7
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