4.4 Article

Lipid A Variants Activate Human TLR4 and the Noncanonical Inflammasome Differently and Require the Core Oligosaccharide for Inflammasome Activation

Journal

INFECTION AND IMMUNITY
Volume 90, Issue 8, Pages -

Publisher

AMER SOC MICROBIOLOGY
DOI: 10.1128/iai.00208-22

Keywords

caspase-4; inflammasome; TLR4; lipid A; lipopolysaccharide

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation Graduate Fellowship [DGE-1845298]
  2. Burroughs-Welcome Fund Investigators in the Pathogenesis of Infectious Diseases Award
  3. [R01AI118861]
  4. [R01AI123243]
  5. [R21AI151476]
  6. [HHS-NIH-NIAID-BAA2017]
  7. [R01AI128530]
  8. [R01AI139102]
  9. [K12GM081259]
  10. [T32AI095190]
  11. [T32AR076951]

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This study investigates the impact of alterations in the phosphorylation and acylation state of Gram-negative bacterial lipid A on the activation of human TLR4 and CASP4/5. The findings reveal that the acylation state has a differential impact on TLR4 and CASP4/5 activation, while the phosphorylation state does not have a significant effect. These results contribute to a better understanding of the innate immune system's ability to recognize and detect a wide range of bacterial pathogens.
Detection of Gram-negative bacterial lipid A by the extracellular sensor, myeloid differentiation 2 (MD2)/Toll-like receptor 4 (TLR4), or the intracellular inflamma-some sensors, CASP4 and CASPS, induces robust inflammatory responses. The chemical structure of lipid A, specifically its phosphorylation and acylation state, varies across and within bacterial species, potentially allowing pathogens to evade or suppress host immunity. Currently, it is not clear how distinct alterations in the phosphorylation or acylation state of lipid A affect both human TLR4 and CASP4/5 activation. Using a panel of engineered lipooligosaccharides (LOS) derived from Yersinia pestis with defined lipid A structures that vary in their acylation or phosphorylation state, we identified that differences in phosphorylation state did not affect TLR4 or CASP4/5 activation. However, the acylation state differentially impacted TLR4 and CASP4/5 activation. Specifically, all tetra-, penta-, and hexa-acylated LOS variants examined activated CASP4/5-dependent responses, whereas TLR4 responded to penta- and hexa-acylated LOS but did not respond to tetra-acylated LOS or penta-acylated LOS lacking the secondary acyl chain at the 3' position. As expected, lipid A alone was sufficient for TLR4 activation. In contrast, both core oli-gosaccharide and lipid A were required for robust CASP4/5 inflammasome activation in human macrophages, whereas core oligosaccharide was not required to activate mouse macrophages expressing CASP4. Our findings show that human TLR4 and CASP4/5 detect both shared and nonoverlapping LOS/lipid A structures, which enables the innate immune system to recognize a wider range of bacterial LOS/lipid A and would thereby be expected to constrain the ability of pathogens to evade innate immune detection.

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