4.8 Article

NLRP3 cages revealed by full-length mouse NLRP3 structure control pathway activation

Journal

CELL
Volume 184, Issue 26, Pages 6299-+

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.cell.2021.11.011

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [HD087988, AI124491]
  2. CancerResearch Institute Irvington Postdoctoral Fellowship
  3. Damon Runyon Fellowship Award

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The NLRP3 protein forms a double-ring structure held together by LRR-LRR interactions, predominantly localized on the cell membrane, ready to sense various signals to induce inflammasome activation.
The NACHT-, leucine-rich-repeat- (LRR), and pyrin domain-containing protein 3 (NLRP3) is emerging to be a critical intracellular inflammasome sensor of membrane integrity and a highly important clinical target against chronic inflammation. Here, we report that an endogenous, stimulus-responsive form of full-length mouse NLRP3 is a 12- to 16-mer double-ring cage held together by LRR-LRR interactions with the pyrin domains shielded within the assembly to avoid premature activation. Surprisingly, this NLRP3 form is predominantly membrane localized, which is consistent with previously noted localization of NLRP3 at various membrane organelles. Structure-guided mutagenesis reveals that trans-Golgi network dispersion into vesicles, an early event observed for many NLRP3-activating stimuli, requires the double-ring cages of NLRP3. Double-ring-defective NLRP3 mutants abolish inflammasome punctum formation, caspase-1 processing, and cell death. Thus, our data uncover a physiological NLRP3 oligomer on the membrane that is poised to sense diverse signals to induce inflammasome activation.

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