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Psoriasis-like disease prevents squamous skin tumor development by neutrophil-driven inflammation - PubMed

4 days ago
  • #neutrophils
  • #psoriasis
  • #tumorigenesis
  • Psoriasis-like disease prevents squamous skin tumor development through neutrophil-driven inflammation.
  • Neutrophil-dependent inflammation in psoriasis-like skin leads to infiltration of CD54-expressing neutrophils, release of cytotoxic granules, and neutrophil extracellular traps (NETs).
  • Keratinocytes in psoriasis-like skin show enhanced senescence and diminished responsiveness to mitogenic signals like epidermal growth factor and Wnt/β-catenin.
  • Neutrophil depletion reduces psoriasis-like inflammation, abolishes keratinocyte senescence, and restores tumor growth.
  • The study suggests that neutrophil granules and NETs eliminate tumor cells or induce senescence in keratinocytes, preventing tumor growth.
  • Findings highlight an innate control mechanism of skin tumorigenesis in psoriasis-like disease, relevant for cancer prevention strategies.