Human TH17 cells engage gasdermin E pores to release IL-1α on NLRP3 inflammasome activation
Chao, Ying-Yin; Puhach, Alisa; Frieser, David; Arunkumar, Mahima; Lehner, Laurens; Seeholzer, Thomas; Garcia-Lopez, Albert; van der Wal, Marlot; Fibi-Smetana, Silvia; Dietschmann, Axel; Sommermann, Thomas; Ćiković, Tamara; Taher, Leila; Gresnigt, Mark S; Vastert, Sebastiaan J; van Wijk, Femke; Panagiotou, Gianni; Krappmann, Daniel; Groß, Olaf; Zielinski, Christina E
(2023) Nature immunology, volume 24, issue 2, pp. 295 - 308
(Article)
Abstract
It has been shown that innate immune responses can adopt adaptive properties such as memory. Whether T cells utilize innate immune signaling pathways to diversify their repertoire of effector functions is unknown. Gasdermin E (GSDME) is a membrane pore-forming molecule that has been shown to execute pyroptotic cell death and
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thus to serve as a potential cancer checkpoint. In the present study, we show that human T cells express GSDME and, surprisingly, that this expression is associated with durable viability and repurposed for the release of the alarmin interleukin (IL)-1α. This property was restricted to a subset of human helper type 17 T cells with specificity for Candida albicans and regulated by a T cell-intrinsic NLRP3 inflammasome, and its engagement of a proteolytic cascade of successive caspase-8, caspase-3 and GSDME cleavage after T cell receptor stimulation and calcium-licensed calpain maturation of the pro-IL-1α form. Our results indicate that GSDME pore formation in T cells is a mechanism of unconventional cytokine release. This finding diversifies our understanding of the functional repertoire and mechanistic equipment of T cells and has implications for antifungal immunity.
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Keywords: Immunology and Allergy, Immunology, Journal Article
ISSN: 1529-2908
Publisher: Nature Research
Note: Funding Information: We thank all past and present members of the Zielinski laboratory for fruitful discussions and technical support, in particular R. Noster, A. Burrell, F. Laudisi and S.-H. Park for technical and experimental help. We thank L. Richter and J. Klein (Core Facility Flow Cytometry, Biomedical Center, Munich) for support with imaging flow cytometry, M. Schmidt-Supprian for support with CRISPR–Cas9 gene editing and P. Wehner for support with live cell imaging analysis. This work was funded by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (German Research Foundation) through grant no. SFB 1054 (project ID 210592381, to C.E.Z.), TRR/SFB 124 (project ID 210879364, to C.E.Z. and M.S.G.), Leibniz Center for Photonics in Infection Research (grant no. LPI-BT6, to C.E.Z.), GRK 2606 (project ID 423813989, to O.G.), Germany’s Excellence Strategy (Balance of the Microverse, to C.E.Z), Emmy Noether Program (project no. 434385622/GR 5617/1-1, to M.S.G.), the German Center of Infection Research (to C.E.Z.), Carl-Zeiss Stiftung (to C.E.Z.) and by the European Research Council (grant nos. 337689 and 966687, to O.G.). Publisher Copyright: © 2023, The Author(s).
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