Caspase-11 cleaves gasdermin D for non-canonical inflammasome signalling.

Journal: Nature
Published:
Abstract

Intracellular lipopolysaccharide from Gram-negative bacteria including Escherichia coli, Salmonella typhimurium, Shigella flexneri, and Burkholderia thailandensis activates mouse caspase-11, causing pyroptotic cell death, interleukin-1β processing, and lethal septic shock. How caspase-11 executes these downstream signalling events is largely unknown. Here we show that gasdermin D is essential for caspase-11-dependent pyroptosis and interleukin-1β maturation. A forward genetic screen with ethyl-N-nitrosourea-mutagenized mice links Gsdmd to the intracellular lipopolysaccharide response. Macrophages from Gsdmd(-/-) mice generated by gene targeting also exhibit defective pyroptosis and interleukin-1β secretion induced by cytoplasmic lipopolysaccharide or Gram-negative bacteria. In addition, Gsdmd(-/-) mice are protected from a lethal dose of lipopolysaccharide. Mechanistically, caspase-11 cleaves gasdermin D, and the resulting amino-terminal fragment promotes both pyroptosis and NLRP3-dependent activation of caspase-1 in a cell-intrinsic manner. Our data identify gasdermin D as a critical target of caspase-11 and a key mediator of the host response against Gram-negative bacteria.

Authors
Nobuhiko Kayagaki, Irma Stowe, Bettina Lee, Karen O'rourke, Keith Anderson, Søren Warming, Trinna Cuellar, Benjamin Haley, Merone Roose Girma, Qui Phung, Peter Liu, Jennie Lill, Hong Li, Jiansheng Wu, Sarah Kummerfeld, Juan Zhang, Wyne Lee, Scott Snipas, Guy Salvesen, Lucy Morris, Linda Fitzgerald, Yafei Zhang, Edward Bertram, Christopher Goodnow, Vishva Dixit
Relevant Conditions

Necrosis, Sepsis