02591nas a2200349 4500000000100000008004100001260001300042653002000055653001400075653001100089653002500100653004100125653001600166653001800182653000900200100001400209700001400223700001200237700001300249700001400262700001400276700001500290700001200305700001100317700001300328700001900341245013700360300001200497490000700509520171100516022001402227 2011 d c2011 Oct10aDendritic Cells10aGranuloma10aHumans10aImmunohistochemistry10aIndoleamine-Pyrrole 2,3,-Dioxygenase10aMacrophages10aMyeloid Cells10aSkin1 aBubnoff D1 aScheler M1 aWilms H1 aWenzel J1 aBubnoff N1 aHäcker G1 aSchultze J1 aPopov A1 aRacz P1 aBieber T1 aWickenhauser C00aIndoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase-expressing myeloid dendritic cells and macrophages in infectious and noninfectious cutaneous granulomas. a819-8320 v653 a

BACKGROUND: The enzyme indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase (IDO) degrades the essential amino acid tryptophan, and this degradation is an immunosuppressive mechanism that is mainly used by antigen-presenting cells. IDO-expressing dendritic cells and macrophages have previously been identified as components of lymph node granulomas after Listeria monocytogenes infection. In this study we undertook an analysis of IDO expression in granulomas of infectious and noninfectious origin in the human skin.

METHODS: Lesional skin biopsy specimens (n = 22) from different granulomatous skin disorders (lupus vulgaris, sarcoidosis, granuloma annulare, leprosy) were analyzed. Immunohistochemistry was performed to identify and locate the enzyme IDO within the inflammatory granulomatous infiltrate (IDO, CD11c, CD68, S100, CD3, Foxp3). Two-color immunofluorescence of IDO in combination with multiple markers was applied to characterize the IDO-expressing cells.

RESULTS: Cutaneous granulomas of different origin strongly express IDO, mainly in the center and in the ring wall of the granulomas. We demonstrate that in infectious, but also in noninfectious human cutaneous granulomas the large myeloid CD11c(+)S100(+)CD68(-) dendritic cells and the CD68(+) macrophages express IDO.

LIMITATIONS: This study was limited by the lack of details about the exact stage or maturity of granuloma formation in the specimens investigated.

CONCLUSION: These findings reveal that IDO expression in myeloid dendritic cells and macrophages is part of an integrated response of granuloma formation, which may be a unifying feature of granulomatous reactions in the skin.

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