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Wiley, Pigment Cell & Melanoma Research, 1(25), p. 88-98, 2011

DOI: 10.1111/j.1755-148x.2011.00916.x

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DOI: 10.4016/39524.01

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Hsp70i Is a Critical Component of the Immune Response Leading to Vitiligo

This paper is made freely available by the publisher.
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.

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Abstract

HSP70i and other stress proteins have been used in anti-tumor vaccines. This begs the question whether HSP70i plays a unique role in immune activation. We vaccinated inducible HSP70i (Hsp70-1) knockout mice and wild-type animals with optimized TRP-1, a highly immunogenic melanosomal target molecule. We were unable to induce robust and lasting depigmentation in the Hsp70-1 knockout mice, and in vivo cytolytic assays revealed a lack of CTL activity. Absence of T cell infiltration to the skin and maintenance of hair follicle melanocytes was observed. By contrast, depigmentation proceeded without interruption in mice lacking a tissue specific constitutive isoform of HSP70 (Hsp70-2) vaccinated with TRP-2. Next, we demonstrated that HSP70i was necessary and sufficient to accelerate depigmentation in vitiligo-prone Pmel-1 mice, accompanied by lasting phenotypic changes in dendritic cell subpopulations. In summary, these studies assign a unique function to HSP70i in vitiligo, and identify HSP70i as targetable entity for treatment.