| Literature DB >> 28979266 |
Andrea C Lei-Leston1, Alison G Murphy1, Kevin J Maloy1.
Abstract
Pattern recognition receptors (PRR), such as NOD-like receptors (NLRs), sense conserved microbial signatures, and host danger signals leading to the coordination of appropriate immune responses. Upon activation, a subset of NLR initiate the assembly of a multimeric protein complex known as the inflammasome, which processes pro-inflammatory cytokines and mediates a specialized form of cell death known as pyroptosis. The identification of inflammasome-associated genes as inflammatory bowel disease susceptibility genes implicates a role for the inflammasome in intestinal inflammation. Despite the fact that the functional importance of inflammasomes within immune cells has been well established, the contribution of inflammasome expression in non-hematopoietic cells remains comparatively understudied. Given that intestinal epithelial cells (IEC) act as a barrier between the host and the intestinal microbiota, inflammasome expression by these cells is likely important for intestinal immune homeostasis. Accumulating evidence suggests that the inflammasome plays a key role in shaping epithelial responses at the host-lumen interface with many inflammasome components highly expressed by IEC. Recent studies have exposed functional roles of IEC inflammasomes in mucosal immune defense, inflammation, and tumorigenesis. In this review, we present the main features of the predominant inflammasomes and their effector mechanisms contributing to intestinal homeostasis and inflammation. We also discuss existing controversies in the field and open questions related to their implications in disease. A comprehensive understanding of the molecular basis of intestinal inflammasome signaling could hold therapeutic potential for clinical translation.Entities:
Keywords: IL-18; IL-1β; NOD-like receptor; inflammasome; inflammatory bowel disease; intestinal epithelial cells; pyroptosis
Year: 2017 PMID: 28979266 PMCID: PMC5611393 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2017.01168
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
NLR family members and other inflammasome components.
| NLR/inflammasome component | Ligand/agonist | Expression in IEC | |
|---|---|---|---|
| NLRA (acidic activation domain) | CIITA | Unknown | Yes ( |
| NLRB1 (BIR domain) | NAIP1, NAIP2 | T3SS ( | Yes ( |
| NAIP5, NAIP6 | Flagellin ( | Yes ( | |
| NLRC (CARD domain) | NLRC1 (NOD1) | iE-DAP ( | Yes ( |
| NLCR2 (NOD2) | MDP ( | Yes ( | |
| NLRC4 | Flagellin, T3SS rod proteins ( | Yes ( | |
| NLRC3 + 5 | Unknown | ND | |
| NLRP (PYRIN domain) | NLRP1 | Anthrax lethal toxin, ATP, and MDP ( | Yes ( |
| NLRP3 | ATP, MSU, toxins, oxidized mitochondrial DNA, alum, silica, UV radiation, amyloid β ( | Yes ( | |
| NLRP6 | Metabolites (e.g., taurine, spermine, and histamine) ( | Yes ( | |
| NLRP7 | Microbial lipopeptides ( | ND | |
| NLRP9b | dsRNA ( | Yes ( | |
| NLRP12 | ND | ||
| NLRP 2, 4, 5, 8, 10, 11, 13 + 14 | Unknown | ND | |
| Unclassified | NLRX1 | ssRNA, dsRNA, and poly (I:C) ( | Yes ( |
| AIM2 | dsDNA ( | Yes ( | |
| Asc | NA | Yes ( | |
| Caspase-1 | NA | Yes ( | |
| Human caspase-4/murine caspase-11 | LPS ( | Yes ( | |
| Caspase-8 | ND | Yes ( | |
| IL-1β | NA | Yes ( | |
| IL-18 | NA | Yes ( | |
SCFA, small chain fatty acids; ND, not determined; NA, not applicable; T3SS, type 3 secretion system; IEC, intestinal epithelial cells; CARD, caspase recruitment domain; AIM2, absent in melanoma 2; dsDNA, double-stranded DNA; NLR, NOD-like receptor.
Inflammasome components and intestinal inflammation.
| Mutant strain | Trigger | Effect | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Asc−/− | DSS | Increased pathology | ( |
| Decreased IL-18 levels | ( | ||
| Decreased AMP levels | ( | ||
| Increased bacterial colonization | ( | ||
| Increased pathology | ( | ||
| Decreased IL-18 levels | ( | ||
| Decreased mucus secretion by goblet cells | ( | ||
| Rotavirus | Increased viral load | ( | |
| Casp1−/−Casp11−/− | DSS | Increased pathology | ( |
| Decreased IL-18 levels | ( | ||
| Increased bacterial colonization | ( | ||
| FlaTox | Decreased IEC pyroptosis | ( | |
| NSAID-induced SI damage | Decreased pathology | ( | |
| Caspase1−/− | DSS | Decreased pathology | ( |
| Rotavirus | Increased viral load | ( | |
| Casp1ΔIEC | DSS | Decreased pathology | ( |
| Casp1ΔIEC | Rotavirus | Increased viral load | ( |
| Caspase11−/− | DSS | Increased pathology | ( |
| Increased IL-18 | ( | ||
| Decreased IL-18 and IL-22 | ( | ||
| Decreased IL-18 levels | ( | ||
| gasdermin D−/− | FlaTox | Decreased IEC pyroptosis | ( |
| gasdermin D−/− | Rotavirus | Increased viral load | ( |
| Casp1−/−Casp8−/−Ripk3−/− | Decreased IEC extrusion | ( | |
| NAIP1–6Δ/Δ | Increased intraepithelial bacterial loads | ( | |
| NAIP1–6Δ/ΔIEC | Increased intraepithelial bacterial loads | ( | |
| NLRC4−/− | DSS | Increased pathology | ( |
| Increased bacterial colonization | ( | ||
| Increased intraepithelial bacterial loads | ( | ||
| iNLRC4+Vil-Cre+ | Comparable bacterial burden | ( | |
| NLRP1−/− | DSS | Increased pathology | ( |
| NLRP3−/− | DSS | Increased pathology | ( |
| Decreased pathology | ( | ||
| Increased pathology | ( | ||
| Increased bacterial colonization | ( | ||
| T cell transfer colitis | Increased pathology upon transfer of NLRP3−/− T cells into lymphopenic hosts | ( | |
| NSAID-induced SI damage | Decreased pathology | ( | |
| NLRP6−/− | DSS | Increased pathology | ( |
| Decreased IL-18 levels | ( | ||
| Decreased AMP levels | ( | ||
| Increased bacterial colonization | ( | ||
| NLRP9b−/− | Rotavirus | Increased viral load | ( |
| NLRP9bΔIEC | Rotavirus | Increased viral load | ( |
| NLRP12−/− | DSS | Increased pathology | ( |
| NLRX1ΔIEC | DSS | No change in pathology | ( |
| AIM2−/− | DSS | Increased pathology | ( |
| Decreased IL-1β levels | ( | ||
| Decreased IL-18 levels | ( | ||
| Decreased IL-22BP levels | ( | ||
| Dysregulated AMP levels | ( | ||
AMP, antimicrobial peptides; C. rod, Citrobacter rodentium; FlaTox, Legionella pneumophila flagellin fused to the N-terminal domain of Bacillus anthracis lethal factor; NAIP5, ligand delivered to cytosol; IEC, intestinal epithelial cells; NSAID, non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs; SI, small intestine; S. Tm, Salmonella Typhimurium; DSS, dextran sodium sulfate; rIL-18, recombinant IL-18; NLR, NOD-like receptor.
Mutant strain: Casp1.
Figure 1Inflammasomes in intestinal epithelial cells. During homeostatic conditions, in the absence of inflammation, IL-18 is released from epithelial cells and is involved in epithelial repair, proliferation, and maturation (33, 34). A metabolomics screen identified microbiome-derived metabolites, including taurine, that are capable of modulating NLRP6 inflammasome activation and subsequent IL-18 secretion (32). However, the mechanisms of release of IL-18 during homeostatic conditions are undefined. In the context of microbial invasion and pathogen-associated molecular pattern stimulation, inflammasome activation in intestinal epithelial cells has been described to engage both “canonical,” caspase-1-mediated and “non-canonical,” caspase-11 pathways (14, 24, 44). Recently, caspase-8 was also shown to be involved in inflammasome responses downstream of NLRC4 engagement with intracellular flagellin (24). Both caspase-1 and caspase-11 can lead to cell death by pyroptosis accompanied by IL-18 secretion; however, caspase-1 and caspase-8 were shown to lead to a non-lytic form of cell death upon NLRC4 sensing of intracellular flagellin (24). These observations raise the possibility of a distinction between a pro-immunogenic cell death signal driven by caspase-11 and GsdmD, a pro-silent cell death driven by caspase-8, and perhaps a threshold-dependent cellular decision between non-lytic and lytic forms of cell death involving caspase-1. Under low stress levels, it would be desirable to deal with the invading threat in an immunologically silent way. However, when the threat is high, an immunogenic cell death could recruit inflammatory cells to help clear the microbial insult.
Soluble mediators of inflammasome activation and intestinal inflammation.
| Mutant strain | Trigger | Effect | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| IL-1αβ−/− | No effect on intraepithelial bacterial load | ( | |
| IL-1β−/− | DSS | Decreased pathology | ( |
| Increased bacterial colonization | ( | ||
| IL-1R1−/− | DSS | Increased pathology | ( |
| Increased pathology | ( | ||
| T cell transfer colitis | Decreased pathology upon transfer of IL-1RI−/− T cells into lymphopenic hosts | ( | |
| IL-18−/− | – | Increased intestinal Th1 and Th17 effector cells | ( |
| DSS | Increased pathology | ( | |
| No effect on bacterial colonization | ( | ||
| Increased bacterial colonization | ( | ||
| No effect on intraepithelial load | ( | ||
| Rotavirus | Comparable viral load | ( | |
| IL-18Tg | DSS | Increased pathology | ( |
| IL-18ΔIEC | DSS | Decreased pathology | ( |
| IL-18Δ/HE | DSS | Decreased pathology | ( |
| IL-18R−/− | – | Increased intestinal Th1 and Th17 effector cells | ( |
| Increased bacterial colonization | ( | ||
| IL-18rΔIEC | DSS | Decreased pathology | ( |
| IL-18r Δ/HE | DSS | No difference in pathology | ( |
| IL-18bp−/− | DSS | Increased pathology | ( |
| IL-18bp−/−IL-18rΔ/HE | DSS | No difference in pathology | ( |
C. rod, Citrobacter rodentisum; S. Tm, Salmonella Typhimurium; Treg, T regulatory cells.
Mutant strain: IL-18Tg, IL-18 transgenic: overexpression of IL-18; IL-18.
Characteristic features of different cell death pathways.
| Characteristic of the dying cell | Apoptosis | Necrosis | Pyroptosis | Necroptosis |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| DNA fragmentation | + ( | +/− ( | + ( | ? (See necrosis) |
| Nuclear condensation | + ( | ( | + ( | − ( |
| Nuclear integrity maintained | − ( | + ( | + ( | + ( |
| Cell swelling | − ( | + ( | + ( | + ( |
| Lysis/membrane permeability | − ( | + ( | + ( | + ( |
| Membrane blebbing and shedding | + ( | − ( | − ( | ? (See necrosis) |
| Membrane pore formation | − | − | + ( | + ( |
| DAMP release | − | + ( | + ( | + ( |
| IL-1β and IL-18 release | − | − | + ( | − |
| Main caspases | casp-3 and casp-7 | Non-caspase mediated | casp-1 and casp-11 (mouse) | Non-caspase mediated ( |
+, present; −, absent; +/−, present to a limited degree; ?, not yet assessed.
GsdmD, gasdermin D; DAMP, danger-associated molecular pattern.