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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Inflammasome Activation Triggers Caspase-1-Mediated Cleavage of cGAS to Regulate Responses to DNA Virus Infection.

Journal:
Immunity
Year:
2017
Authors:
Wang, Yutao et al.
Affiliation:
School of Life Sciences · China

Abstract

Viral infection triggers host innate immune responses that result in the production of various cytokines including type I interferons (IFN), activation of inflammasomes, and programmed cell death of the infected cells. Tight control of inflammatory cytokine production is crucial for the triggering of an effective immune response that can resolve the infection without causing host pathology. In examining the inflammatory response of Ascand Casp1macrophages, we found that deficiency in these molecules resulted in increased IFN production upon DNA virus infection, but not RNA virus challenge. Investigation of the underlying mechanism revealed that upon canonical and non-canonical inflammasome activation, caspase-1 interacted with cyclic GMP-AMP (cGAMP) synthase (cGAS), cleaving it and dampening cGAS-STING-mediated IFN production. Deficiency in inflammasome signaling enhanced host resistance to DNA virus in vitro and in vivo, and this regulatory role extended to other inflammatory caspases. Thus, inflammasome activation dampens cGAS-dependent signaling, suggesting cross-regulation between intracellular DNA-sensing pathways.

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Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/28314590/