| Literature DB >> 34112781 |
Jing Geng1,2, Yiran Shi1, Jinjia Zhang1, Bingying Yang1, Ping Wang1, Weihong Yuan2, Hao Zhao1, Junhong Li1, Funiu Qin1, Lixin Hong1, Changchuan Xie1, Xianming Deng1, Yujie Sun3, Congying Wu4, Lanfen Chen5, Dawang Zhou6.
Abstract
TLR4 signaling plays key roles in the innate immune response to microbial infection. Innate immune cells encounter different mechanical cues in both health and disease to adapt their behaviors. However, the impact of mechanical sensing signals on TLR4 signal-mediated innate immune response remains unclear. Here we show that TLR4 signalling augments macrophage bactericidal activity through the mechanical sensor Piezo1. Bacterial infection or LPS stimulation triggers assembly of the complex of Piezo1 and TLR4 to remodel F-actin organization and augment phagocytosis, mitochondrion-phagosomal ROS production and bacterial clearance and genetic deficiency of Piezo1 results in abrogation of these responses. Mechanistically, LPS stimulates TLR4 to induce Piezo1-mediated calcium influx and consequently activates CaMKII-Mst1/2-Rac axis for pathogen ingestion and killing. Inhibition of CaMKII or knockout of either Mst1/2 or Rac1 results in reduced macrophage bactericidal activity, phenocopying the Piezo1 deficiency. Thus, we conclude that TLR4 drives the innate immune response via Piezo1 providing critical insight for understanding macrophage mechanophysiology and the host response.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34112781 DOI: 10.1038/s41467-021-23683-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Commun ISSN: 2041-1723 Impact factor: 14.919