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Tertiary Lymphoid Organs at the Center Stage of Skin's Humoral Immunity

Gribonika, Inta LU orcid (2025) In Immunological Reviews 334(1).
Abstract

The skin is the outermost organ that serves as the host's live, microbiota-inhabited physical border, evolved to cope with continuous confrontation by a wide variety of environmental elements. This dynamic borderline is prone to injury and damage. Therefore, to deliver on the critical demands for protection, skin is tightly associated with innate and adaptive defense mechanisms that ensure homeostatic tissue barrier integrity. We recently described the skin's ability to form its own autonomous and protective immune response independently of known professional organs. Cutaneous immunocompetence was achieved through the formation of dermal tertiary lymphoid organs (TLOs) that provide protective humoral activity similar to the classical... (More)

The skin is the outermost organ that serves as the host's live, microbiota-inhabited physical border, evolved to cope with continuous confrontation by a wide variety of environmental elements. This dynamic borderline is prone to injury and damage. Therefore, to deliver on the critical demands for protection, skin is tightly associated with innate and adaptive defense mechanisms that ensure homeostatic tissue barrier integrity. We recently described the skin's ability to form its own autonomous and protective immune response independently of known professional organs. Cutaneous immunocompetence was achieved through the formation of dermal tertiary lymphoid organs (TLOs) that provide protective humoral activity similar to the classical germinal center reaction in the lymph node. This response was mediated by cutaneous microbiota uncoupled from inflammatory signals and positioned within the healthy skin. Our findings illustrate the power of non-inflammatory host-microbiota interaction and open a door for reevaluation of topical disease development and progression. A detailed understanding of highly coordinated tissue-specific determinants that facilitate local antibody response may provide innovative solutions in skin health care and therapies. In this review, I elaborate on our findings and argue for TLO's importance in the host's immune arsenal, which is at the very center of skin's humoral immunity.

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Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
antibodies, B cells, microbiota, skin, T cells, tertiary lymphoid organs
in
Immunological Reviews
volume
334
issue
1
article number
e70061
publisher
Wiley-Blackwell
external identifiers
  • scopus:105014948072
  • pmid:40910751
ISSN
0105-2896
DOI
10.1111/imr.70061
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
b5464097-d498-4e07-b3eb-5acb89f8824a
date added to LUP
2025-10-16 11:31:45
date last changed
2025-10-30 12:32:09
@article{b5464097-d498-4e07-b3eb-5acb89f8824a,
  abstract     = {{<p>The skin is the outermost organ that serves as the host's live, microbiota-inhabited physical border, evolved to cope with continuous confrontation by a wide variety of environmental elements. This dynamic borderline is prone to injury and damage. Therefore, to deliver on the critical demands for protection, skin is tightly associated with innate and adaptive defense mechanisms that ensure homeostatic tissue barrier integrity. We recently described the skin's ability to form its own autonomous and protective immune response independently of known professional organs. Cutaneous immunocompetence was achieved through the formation of dermal tertiary lymphoid organs (TLOs) that provide protective humoral activity similar to the classical germinal center reaction in the lymph node. This response was mediated by cutaneous microbiota uncoupled from inflammatory signals and positioned within the healthy skin. Our findings illustrate the power of non-inflammatory host-microbiota interaction and open a door for reevaluation of topical disease development and progression. A detailed understanding of highly coordinated tissue-specific determinants that facilitate local antibody response may provide innovative solutions in skin health care and therapies. In this review, I elaborate on our findings and argue for TLO's importance in the host's immune arsenal, which is at the very center of skin's humoral immunity.</p>}},
  author       = {{Gribonika, Inta}},
  issn         = {{0105-2896}},
  keywords     = {{antibodies; B cells; microbiota; skin; T cells; tertiary lymphoid organs}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  number       = {{1}},
  publisher    = {{Wiley-Blackwell}},
  series       = {{Immunological Reviews}},
  title        = {{Tertiary Lymphoid Organs at the Center Stage of Skin's Humoral Immunity}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/imr.70061}},
  doi          = {{10.1111/imr.70061}},
  volume       = {{334}},
  year         = {{2025}},
}