MemoryCells in Atopic Dermatitis: Paving the Way to Disease Modification
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Dominguez Lopez, Raquel; Aranda Clemente, Carlos José; Gómez de la Fuente, Enrique; Pérez García, Bibiana; Perez Bootello, Javier; Abbad Jaime de Aragon, Carlota; González Cantero, Álvaro; Berna Rico, EmilioEditorial
MDPI
Materia
Atopic dermatitis Immunological memory Tissue-resident memory T cells
Fecha
2026-03-03Referencia bibliográfica
Dominguez-Lopez, R., Aranda, C. J., Gómez-de la Fuente, E., Pérez-García, B., Perez-Bootello, J., Abbad-Jaime de Aragon, C., González-Cantero, Á., & Berna-Rico, E. (2026). Memory Cells in Atopic Dermatitis: Paving the Way to Disease Modification. International Journal of Molecular Sciences, 27(5), 2371. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms27052371
Resumen
Atopic dermatitis (AD) is a chronic relapsing inflammatory skin disease in which persis
tence of immunological memory underlies disease recurrence and progression toward
atopic comorbidities. Evidence indicates that pathogenic tissue-resident memory T cells
(TRM), including Th2- and Th22-skewed subsets, among others, persist in both lesional
and clinically resolved skin and rapidly re-initiate inflammation through production of
IL-4, IL-13, IL-22 and IL-31, promoting barrier dysfunction and pruritus. In parallel,
circulating CLA+ memory T cells retain skin-homing capacity and contribute to flare reacti
vation, while IgG1+CD23 IL-4Rα+ type-2 memory B cells (MBC2) constitute a reservoir for
high-affinity IgE production, linking cutaneous inflammation with allergic comorbidities.
These adaptive memory compartments are sustained by epithelial alarmins, dendritic
cell–derived chemokines such as CCL17, CCL22 and CCL18, and the OX40/OX40L costim
ulatory pathway, which promotes differentiation, survival and tissue retention of memory T
cells. Clinical and transcriptomic studies show how, although IL-4/IL-13 blockade reduces
circulating type-2 responses, Th2A cells, Tc2 cells and activated dendritic cells can persist
in clinically resolved skin, providing a mechanistic basis for relapse after treatment with
drawal. Together, these findings support the relevance of targeting memory-imprinting
pathways as a promising mechanism to achieve durable disease modification in AD.





