| Literature DB >> 35016014 |
Weihong Wang1, Joshua S Prokopec1, Yixin Zhang1, Maria Sukhoplyasova1, Himaly Shinglot1, Man-Tzu Wang2, Andreas Linkermann3, Jacob Stewart-Ornstein4, Yi-Nan Gong5.
Abstract
Although overwhelming plasma membrane integrity loss leads to cell lysis and necrosis, cells can tolerate a limited level of plasma membrane damage, undergo ESCRT-III-mediated repair, and survive. Here, we find that cells which undergo limited plasma membrane damage from the pore-forming actions of MLKL, GSDMD, perforin, or detergents experience local activation of PKCs through Ca2+ influx at the damage sites. S660-phosphorylated PKCs subsequently activate the TAK1/IKKs axis and RelA/Cux1 complex to trigger chemokine expressions. We observe that in late-stage cancers, cells with active MLKL show expression of CXCL8. Similar expression induction is also found in ischemia-injured kidneys. Chemokines generated in this manner are also indispensable for recruiting immune cells to the dead and dying cells. This plasma membrane integrity-sensing pathway is similar to the well-established yeast cell wall integrity signaling pathway at molecular level, and this suggests an evolutionary conserved mechanism to respond to the cellular barrier damage.Entities:
Keywords: GSDMD; MLKL; PKC; chemokines; necroptosis; plasma membrane damage; pore forming; pyroptosis; regulated necrosis; sub-lethal
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35016014 PMCID: PMC8792343 DOI: 10.1016/j.devcel.2021.12.015
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Dev Cell ISSN: 1534-5807 Impact factor: 12.270