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NINJ1 mediates inflammatory cell death, PANoptosis, and lethality during infection conditions and heat stress

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Authors

Han, Joo-Hui; Karki, Rajendra; Malireddi, R. K. Subbarao; Mall, Raghvendra; Sarkar, Roman; Sharma, Bhesh Raj; Klein, Jonathon; Berns, Harmut; Pisharath, Harshan; Pruett-Miller, Shondra M.; Bae, Sung-Jin; Kanneganti, Thirumala-Devi

Issue Date
2024-02
Publisher
Nature Research
Citation
Nature Communications, Vol.15 No.1, p. 1739
Abstract
Fevers are known to be both beneficial and detrimental in disease, but the fundamental innate immune mechanisms driving pathology in this context remain unclear. Here, the authors show that a combination of LPS and heat stress induces inflammatory cell death, PANoptosis, that is dependent on the executioner molecule Ninjurin 1 (Ninj1) to release inflammatory molecules and drive pathogenesis. Innate immunity provides the first line of defense through multiple mechanisms, including pyrogen production and cell death. While elevated body temperature during infection is beneficial to clear pathogens, heat stress (HS) can lead to inflammation and pathology. Links between pathogen exposure, HS, cytokine release, and inflammation have been observed, but fundamental innate immune mechanisms driving pathology during pathogen exposure and HS remain unclear. Here, we use multiple genetic approaches to elucidate innate immune pathways in infection or LPS and HS models. Our results show that bacteria and LPS robustly increase inflammatory cell death during HS that is dependent on caspase-1, caspase-11, caspase-8, and RIPK3 through the PANoptosis pathway. Caspase-7 also contributes to PANoptosis in this context. Furthermore, NINJ1 is an important executioner of this cell death to release inflammatory molecules, independent of other pore-forming executioner proteins, gasdermin D, gasdermin E, and MLKL. In an in vivo HS model, mortality is reduced by deleting NINJ1 and fully rescued by deleting key PANoptosis molecules. Our findings suggest that therapeutic strategies blocking NINJ1 or its upstream regulators to prevent PANoptosis may reduce the release of inflammatory mediators and benefit patients.
ISSN
2041-1723
URI
https://hdl.handle.net/10371/202978
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-45466-x
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  • College of Natural Sciences
  • School of Biological Sciences
Research Area Cytokine Storm, Host Defense, Innate Immunity in Metabolic and Inflammatory Diseases

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