4.8 Article

A20 prevents inflammasome-dependent arthritis by inhibiting macrophage necroptosis through its ZnF7 ubiquitin-binding domain

Journal

NATURE CELL BIOLOGY
Volume 21, Issue 6, Pages 731-742

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/s41556-019-0324-3

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Funding

  1. European Research Council (ERC) [AdG 323040, 787826, AdG 340217]
  2. Greek GSRT project INNATE FIBLROBLAST (ESF) [ERC06]
  3. Greek GSRT project INNATE FIBLROBLAST (NSRF 2007-2013) [ERC06]
  4. European Commission (FP7 grant 'Masterswitch') [223404]
  5. JSPS KAKENHI [JP16H06385, JP26110005, JP15H01366, JP17H05496]
  6. JST PRESTO [JP17940748]
  7. Japan Agency for Medical Research and Development [JP17gm0610004, JP18gm5010001]
  8. FWO
  9. 'Geneeskundige Stichting Koningin Elisabeth' (GSKE)
  10. CBC Banque Prize
  11. Charcot Foundation
  12. Belgian Foundation against Cancer
  13. Kom op tegen Kanker
  14. 'Concerted Research Actions' (GOA) of the Ghent University
  15. Stavros Niarchos Foundation
  16. NSRF 2014-2020 [MIS 5002562]
  17. European Union (ERDF)
  18. Alexander von Humboldt foundation
  19. European Research Council (ERC) [787826] Funding Source: European Research Council (ERC)

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Deficiency in the deubiquitinating enzyme A20 causes severe inflammation in mice, and impaired A20 function is associated with human inflammatory diseases. A20 has been implicated in negatively regulating NF-.B signalling, cell death and inflammasome activation; however, the mechanisms by which A20 inhibits inflammation in vivo remain poorly understood. Genetic studies in mice revealed that its deubiquitinase activity is not essential for A20 anti-inflammatory function. Here we show that A20 prevents inflammasome-dependent arthritis by inhibiting macrophage necroptosis and that this function depends on its zinc finger 7 (ZnF7). We provide genetic evidence that RIPK1 kinase-dependent, RIPK3-MLKL-mediated necroptosis drives inflammasome activation in A20-deficient macrophages and causes inflammatory arthritis in mice. Single-cell imaging revealed that RIPK3-dependent death caused inflammasome-dependent IL-1 beta release from lipopolysaccharide-stimulated A20-deficient macrophages. Importantly, mutation of the A20 ZnF7 ubiquitin binding domain caused arthritis in mice, arguing that ZnF7-dependent inhibition of necroptosis is critical for A20 anti-inflammatory function in vivo.

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