4.8 Article

Fungal gasdermin-like proteins are controlled by proteolytic cleavage

出版社

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2109418119

关键词

gasdermin; fungi; regulated cell death; innate immunity; proteolysis

资金

  1. CNRS
  2. University of Bordeaux
  3. National Science Centre of Poland [2015/17/D/ST6/04054]

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Gasdermins are a family of proteins that control cell death reactions in both mammals and fungi. This study reveals the proteolytic regulation of Gasdermins in fungi, showing an evolutionary parallel between fungal and mammalian cell death pathways.
Gasdermins are a family of pore-forming proteins controlling an inflammatory cell death reaction in the mammalian immune system. The pore-forming ability of the gasdermin proteins is released by proteolytic cleavage with the removal of their inhibitory C-terminal domain. Recently, gasdermin-like proteins have been discovered in fungi and characterized as cell death-inducing toxins in the context of conspecific non-self-discrimination (allorecognition). Although functional analogies have been established between mammalian and fungal gasdermins, the molecular pathways regulating gasdermin activity in fungi remain largely unknown. Here, we characterize a gasdermin-based cell death reaction controlled by the het-Q allorecognition genes in the filamentous fungus Podospora anserina. We show that the cytotoxic activity of the HET-Q1 gasdermin is controlled by proteolysis. HET-Q1 loses a similar to 5-kDa C-terminal fragment during the cell death reaction in the presence of a subtilisin-like serine protease termed HET-Q2. Mutational analyses and successful reconstitution of the cell death reaction in heterologous hosts (Saccharomyces cerevisiae and human 293T cells) suggest that HET-Q2 directly cleaves HET-Q1 to induce cell death. By analyzing the genomic landscape of het-Q1 homologs in fungi, we uncovered that the vast majority of the gasdermin genes are clustered with protease-encoding genes. These HET-Q2-like proteins carry either subtilisin-like or caspase-related proteases, which, in some cases, correspond to the N-terminal effector domain of nucleotide-binding and oligomerization-like receptor proteins. This study thus reveals the proteolytic regulation of gasdermins in fungi and establishes evolutionary parallels between fungal and mammalian gasdermin-dependent cell death pathways.

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