| Literature DB >> 27462105 |
Antonia Di Micco1, Gianluca Frera1, Jérôme Lugrin1, Yvan Jamilloux2, Erh-Ting Hsu3, Aubry Tardivel1, Aude De Gassart1, Léa Zaffalon1, Bojan Bujisic1, Stefanie Siegert4, Manfredo Quadroni5, Petr Broz6, Thomas Henry7, Christine A Hrycyna8, Fabio Martinon9.
Abstract
Inflammasomes are critical sensors that convey cellular stress and pathogen presence to the immune system by activating inflammatory caspases and cytokines such as IL-1β. The nature of endogenous stress signals that activate inflammasomes remains unclear. Here we show that an inhibitor of the HIV aspartyl protease, Nelfinavir, triggers inflammasome formation and elicits an IL-1R-dependent inflammation in mice. We found that Nelfinavir impaired the maturation of lamin A, a structural component of the nuclear envelope, thereby promoting the release of DNA in the cytosol. Moreover, deficiency of the cytosolic DNA-sensor AIM2 impaired Nelfinavir-mediated inflammasome activation. These findings identify a pharmacologic activator of inflammasome and demonstrate the role of AIM2 in detecting endogenous DNA release upon perturbation of nuclear envelope integrity.Entities:
Keywords: DNA sensors; Nelfinavir; inflammasome; nuclear envelope stress; zmpste24
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27462105 PMCID: PMC4987819 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1602419113
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ISSN: 0027-8424 Impact factor: 11.205