4.7 Article

A detrimental role of NLRP6 in host iron metabolism during Salmonella infection

Journal

REDOX BIOLOGY
Volume 49, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.redox.2021.102217

Keywords

NLRP6; Nutritional immunity; Iron metabolism; Ferroportin; Salmonella Typhimurium

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [81971899, 31970132]
  2. Suzhou Municipal Science and Technology Foundation [SYS2019031]
  3. China Post-doctoral Science Foundation [2021M693668]
  4. Priority Academic Program Development (PAPD) of Jiangsu Higher Education Institutions

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Maintaining host iron homeostasis is crucial for nutritional immunity, and this study reveals a novel role of NLRP6 in regulating host iron metabolism and bacterial infection resistance. The mechanism involves NRF2 regulation through NLRP6/AKT interaction and AKT phosphorylation, affecting NRF2 nuclear translocation and KEAP1 transcription.
Maintaining host iron homeostasis is an essential component of nutritional immunity responsible for sequestrating iron from pathogens and controlling infection. Nucleotide-oligomerization domain-like receptors (NLRs) contribute to cytoplasmic sensing and antimicrobial response orchestration. However, it remains unknown whether and how NLRs may regulate host iron metabolism, an important component of nutritional immunity. Here, we demonstrated that NLRP6, a member of the NLR family, has an unconventional role in regulating host iron metabolism that perturbs host resistance to bacterial infection. NLRP6 deficiency is advantageous for maintaining cellular iron homeostasis in both macrophages and enterocytes through increasing the unique iron exporter ferroportin-mediated iron efflux in a nuclear factor erythroid-derived 2-related factor 2 (NRF2)dependent manner. Additional studies uncovered a novel mechanism underlying NRF2 regulation and operating through NLRP6/AKT interaction and that causes a decrease in AKT phosphorylation, which in turn reduces NRF2 nuclear translocation. In the absence of NLRP6, increased AKT activation promotes NRF2/KEAP1 dissociation via increasing mTOR-mediated p62 phosphorylation and downregulates KEAP1 transcription by promoting FOXO3A phosphorylation. Together, our observations provide new insights into the mechanism of nutritional immunity by revealing a novel function of NLRP6 in regulating iron metabolism, and suggest NLRP6 as a therapeutic target for limiting bacterial iron acquisition.

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