Protein folding stress potentiates NLRP1 and CARD8 inflammasome activation.

Publication Type Academic Article
Authors Orth-He E, Huang H, Rao S, Wang Q, Chen Q, O'Mara C, Chui A, Saoi M, Griswold A, Bhattacharjee A, Ball D, Cross J, Bachovchin D
Journal Cell Rep
Volume 42
Issue 1
Pagination 111965
Date Published 01/16/2023
ISSN 2211-1247
Keywords Inflammasomes, Adaptor Proteins, Signal Transducing
Abstract NLRP1 and CARD8 are related pattern-recognition receptors (PRRs) that detect intracellular danger signals and form inflammasomes. Both undergo autoproteolysis, generating N-terminal (NT) and C-terminal (CT) fragments. The proteasome-mediated degradation of the NT releases the CT from autoinhibition, but the stimuli that trigger NT degradation have not been fully elucidated. Here, we show that several distinct agents that interfere with protein folding, including aminopeptidase inhibitors, chaperone inhibitors, and inducers of the unfolded protein response, accelerate NT degradation. However, these agents alone do not trigger inflammasome formation because the released CT fragments are physically sequestered by the serine dipeptidase DPP9. We show that DPP9-binding ligands must also be present to disrupt these complexes and allow the CT fragments to oligomerize into inflammasomes. Overall, these results indicate that NLRP1 and CARD8 detect a specific perturbation that induces both protein folding stress and DPP9 ligand accumulation.
DOI 10.1016/j.celrep.2022.111965
PubMed ID 36649711
PubMed Central ID PMC10042216
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