Literature DB >> 20220089

Identification of the cellular sensor that stimulates the inflammatory response to sterile cell death.

Hajime Kono1, Dipti Karmarkar, Yoichiro Iwakura, Kenneth L Rock.   

Abstract

Cell death provokes a robust inflammatory response. We have previously shown that this response is dependent on IL-1alpha. In this study, we investigate the cellular mechanism used by a host to sense cell death, produce IL-1alpha and also the role of IL-1beta in this response. In almost all cases examined, the IL-1 that stimulated the death-induced inflammatory response came from the host rather than the cell that was dying. In these situations, host bone marrow-derived cells were the key source of the IL-1alpha that was required for the inflammatory response. Conditional cellular depletion and reconstitution in CD11b promoter-driven diphtheria toxin receptor transgenic mice revealed that host macrophages played an essential role in the generation of the inflammatory response and were the source of the required IL-1alpha. In addition, we found a role for IL-1beta in the death-induced inflammatory response and that this cytokine was generated by both bone marrow-derived and radioresistant host cells. The one exception to these findings was that when dendritic cells were injected into mice, they provided a portion of the IL-1 that stimulated inflammation, and this was observed whether the dendritic cells were live or necrotic. Together, these findings demonstrate that macrophages play a key role as the primary sentinels that are required to sense and report cell death in ways that initiate the inflammatory response. One key way they accomplish this important task is by producing IL-1alpha that is needed to initiate the inflammatory response.

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Year:  2010        PMID: 20220089      PMCID: PMC3094104          DOI: 10.4049/jimmunol.0902485

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Immunol        ISSN: 0022-1767            Impact factor:   5.422


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