4.8 Article

Host extracellular vesicles confer cytosolic access to systemic LPS licensing non-canonical inflammasome sensing and pyroptosis

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NATURE CELL BIOLOGY
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NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41556-023-01269-8

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This study demonstrates that extracellular vesicles can capture systemic bacterial lipopolysaccharide (LPS) and transfer it to the cytosol, triggering inflammatory responses and cell death.
Intracellular surveillance for systemic microbial components during homeostasis and infections governs host physiology and immunity. However, a long-standing question is how circulating microbial ligands become accessible to intracellular receptors. Here we show a role for host-derived extracellular vesicles (EVs) in this process; human and murine plasma-derived and cell culture-derived EVs have an intrinsic capacity to bind bacterial lipopolysaccharide (LPS). Remarkably, circulating host EVs capture blood-borne LPS in vivo, and the LPS-laden EVs confer cytosolic access for LPS, triggering non-canonical inflammasome activation of gasdermin D and pyroptosis. Mechanistically, the interaction between the lipid bilayer of EVs and the lipid A of LPS underlies EV capture of LPS, and the intracellular transfer of LPS by EVs is mediated by CD14. Overall, this study demonstrates that EVs capture and escort systemic LPS to the cytosol licensing inflammasome responses, uncovering EVs as a previously unrecognized link between systemic microbial ligands and intracellular surveillance. Kumari et al. show that host-derived extracellular vesicles capture systemic LPS and transfer it to the cytosol of immune cells via CD14-dependent endocytosis, triggering caspase-11-mediated gasdermin D activation and pyroptosis.

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