4.7 Article

Noncanonical inflammasome signaling elicits gasdermin D-dependent neutrophil extracellular traps

Journal

SCIENCE IMMUNOLOGY
Volume 3, Issue 26, Pages -

Publisher

AMER ASSOC ADVANCEMENT SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1126/sciimmunol.aar6676

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Funding

  1. National Health and Medical Research Council of Australia [1064945, 1122240, 1107914, 1141131]
  2. Australian Research Council [FT130100361]
  3. University of Queensland
  4. European Research Council (ERC) [ERC-2017-CoG-770988-InflamCellDeath]
  5. Australian Cancer Research Foundation
  6. National Health and Medical Research Council of Australia [1122240, 1107914, 1064945] Funding Source: NHMRC

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Neutrophil extrusion of neutrophil extracellular traps (NETs) and concomitant cell death (NETosis) provides host defense against extracellular pathogens, whereas macrophage death by pyroptosis enables defense against intracellular pathogens. We report the unexpected discovery that gasdermin D (GSDMD) connects these cell death modalities. We show that neutrophil exposure to cytosolic lipopolysaccharide or cytosolic Gram-negative bacteria (Salmonella Delta sifA and Citrobacter rodentium) activates noncanonical (caspase-4/11) inflammasome signaling and triggers GSDMD-dependent neutrophil death. GSDMD-dependent death induces neutrophils to extrude antimicrobial NETs. Caspase-11 and GSDMD are required for neutrophil plasma membrane rupture during the final stage of NET extrusion. Unexpectedly, caspase-11 and GSDMD are also required for early features of NETosis, including nuclear delobulation and DNA expansion; this is mediated by the coordinate actions of caspase-11 and GSDMD in mediating nuclear membrane permeabilization and histone degradation. In vivo application of deoxyribonuclease I to dissolve NETs during murine Salmonella Delta sifA challenge increases bacterial burden in wild-type but not in Casp11(-/-)and Gsdmd(-/-) mice. Our studies reveal that neutrophils use an inflammasome- and GSDMD-dependent mechanism to activate NETosis as a defense response against cytosolic bacteria.

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