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Query: EC:3.4.22.36 (
caspase-1
)
6,285
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We provide evidence that Salmonella typhimurium kills phagocytes by an unusual proinflammatory mechanism of necrosis that is distinguishable from apoptosis. Infection stimulated a distinctly diffuse pattern of DNA fragmentation in macrophages, which contrasted with the marked nuclear condensation displayed by control cells undergoing chemically induced apoptosis. In apoptotic cells, DNA fragmentation and nuclear condensation result from caspase-3-mediated proteolysis; caspases also subvert necrotic cell death by cleaving and inactivating poly ADP-ribose polymerase (PARP). Caspase-3 was not activated during
Salmonella infection
, and PARP remained in its active, uncleaved state. Another hallmark of apoptosis is sustained membrane integrity during cell death; yet, infected macrophages rapidly lost membrane integrity, as indicated by simultaneous exposure of phosphatidylserine with the uptake of vital dye and the release of the cytoplasmic enzyme lactate dehydrogenase. During experimentally induced necrosis, lethal ion fluxes through the plasma membrane can be prevented by exogenous glycine; similarly, glycine completely blocked Salmonella-induced cytotoxicity. Finally, inhibition of the interleukin (IL)-1-converting enzyme
caspase-1
blocked the death of infected macrophages, but not control cells induced to undergo apoptosis or necrosis. Thus, Salmonella-infected macrophages are killed by an unusual
caspase-1
-dependent mechanism of necrosis.
...
PMID:Salmonella induces macrophage death by caspase-1-dependent necrosis. 1102 88
Recent publications have demonstrated that the protease
caspase-1
is responsible for the processing of pro-interleukin 18 (IL-18) into the active form. Studies on cell lines and murine macrophages have shown that the bacterial invasion factor SipB activates
caspase-1
, triggering cell death. Thus, we investigated the role of SipB in the activation and release of IL-18 in human alveolar macrophages (AM), which are the first line of defense against inhaled pathogens. Under steady-state conditions, AM are a more important source of IL-18 than are dendritic cells (DC) and monocytes. Cytokine production by AM and DC was compared after both types of cells had been infected with a virulent strain of Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium and an isogenic sipB mutant, which were used as an infection model. Infection with virulent Salmonella led to marked cell death with features of apoptosis while both intracellular activation and release of IL-18 were demonstrated. In contrast, the sipB mutant did not induce such cell death or the release of active IL-18. The specific
caspase-1
inhibitor Ac-YVAD-CMK blocked the early IL-18 release in AM infected with the virulent strain. However, the type of
Salmonella infection
did not differentially regulate IL-18 gene expression. We concluded that the bacterial virulence factor SipB plays an essential posttranslational role in the intracellular activation of IL-18 and the release of the cytokine in human AM.
...
PMID:Human alveolar macrophages infected by virulent bacteria expressing SipB are a major source of active interleukin-18. 1287 16
In addition to direct activation of
caspase-1
and induction of apoptosis by SipB, invasive Salmonella stimulates multiple signaling pathways that are key regulators of host cell survival. Nevertheless, little is known about the relative contributions of these pathways to Salmonella-mediated death of macrophages. We studied human monocytic U937 cells and found that apoptosis was induced by invading wild-type Salmonella typhimurium but not by phagocytosed, serum-opsonized, noninvasive Salmonella mutants. Pretreating U937 cells with inhibitors of tyrosine kinases or phosphatidylinositol-3 kinase (PI-3K) completely blocked phagocytosis of opsonized Salmonella mutants but did not affect invasion by wild-type Salmonella or the apoptosis caused by invasion. However, pretreatment with GGTI-298, a geranylgeranyltransferase-1 inhibitor that prevents prenylation of Cdc42 and Rac1, suppressed Salmonella-induced apoptosis by approximately 70%. Transduction of Tat fusion constructs containing dominant-negative Cdc42 or Rac1 significantly inhibited Salmonella-induced cell death, indicating that the cytotoxicity of Salmonella requires activation of Cdc42 and Rac. In contrast to phagocytosis of opsonized bacteria, invasion by S. typhimurium stimulated Cdc42 and Rac1, regardless of the activities of tyrosine- or PI-3K. Moreover,
Salmonella infection
activated Akt protein in a tyrosine-kinase or PI-3K-dependent manner, and a reduced expression of Akt by antisense transfection rendered the cells more sensitive to apoptosis induced by opsonized Salmonella. These results indicate that direct activation of Cdc42 and Rac1 by invasive Salmonella is a prerequisite of Salmonella-mediated death of U937 cells, whereas the simultaneous activation of Akt by tyrosine kinase and PI-3K during receptor-mediated phagocytosis protects cells from apoptosis.
...
PMID:Differential effects of invasion by and phagocytosis of Salmonella typhimurium on apoptosis in human macrophages: potential role of Rho-GTPases and Akt. 1296 Feb 45
NAIP CIIA HET-E and TP1 (NACHT) family proteins are involved in sensing intracellular pathogens or pathogen-derived molecules, triggering host defense responses resulting in caspase-mediated processing of proinflammatory cytokines and NF-kappaB activation. Caspase-associated recruitment domain, leucine-rich repeat, and NACHT-containing protein (CLAN), also known as
ICE
protease-activating factor, belongs to a branch of the NACHT family that contains proteins carrying caspase-associated recruitment domains (CARDs) and leucine-rich repeats (LRRs). By using gene transfer and RNA-interference approaches, we demonstrate in this study that CLAN modulates endogenous
caspase-1
activation and subsequent IL-1beta secretion from human macrophages after exposure to LPS, peptidoglycan, and pathogenic bacteria. CLAN was also found to mediate a direct antibacterial effect within macrophages after
Salmonella infection
and to sensitize host cells to Salmonella-induced cell death through a
caspase-1
-independent mechanism. These results indicate that CLAN contributes to several biological processes central to host defense, suggesting a prominent role for this NACHT family member in innate immunity.
...
PMID:Multiple roles of CLAN (caspase-associated recruitment domain, leucine-rich repeat, and NAIP CIIA HET-E, and TP1-containing protein) in the mammalian innate immune response. 1552 73
Salmonella enterica is an important enteric pathogen of humans and a variety of domestic and wild animals. Infection is initiated in the intestinal tract, and severe disease produces widespread destruction of the intestinal mucosa. Salmonella strains can also disseminate from the intestine and produce serious, sometimes fatal infections with considerable cytopathology in a number of systemic organs. A combination of bacterial genetic and cell biology studies have shown that Salmonella uses specific virulence mechanisms to induce host cell death during infection. Salmonella produces one set of virulence proteins to promote invasion of the intestine and a different set to mediate systemic disease. Significantly, each set of virulence factors mediates a distinct mechanism of host cell death. The Salmonella pathogenicity island-1 (SPI-1) locus encodes a type III protein secretion system (TTSS) that delivers effector proteins required for intestinal invasion and the production of enteritis. The SPI-1 effector SipB activates
caspase-1
in macrophages, releasing IL-1beta and IL-18 and inducing rapid cell death by a mechanism that has features of both apoptosis and necrosis. Caspase-1 is required for Salmonella to infect Peyer's patches and disseminate to systemic tissues in mice. Progressive
Salmonella infection
in mice requires the SPI-2 TTSS and associated effector proteins as well as the SpvB cytotoxin. Apoptosis of macrophages in the liver is found during systemic infection. In cell culture, Salmonella strains induce delayed apoptosis dependent on SPI-2 function in macrophages from a variety of sources. This delayed apoptosis also requires activation of TLR4 on macrophages by the bacterial LPS. Downstream activation of kinase pathways leads to balanced pro- and antiapoptotic regulatory factors in the cell. NF-kappaB and p38 mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) are particularly important for the induction of antiapoptotic factors, whereas the kinase PKR is required for bacterial-induced apoptosis. The Salmonella SPI-2 TTSS is essential for altering the balance in favor of apoptosis during intracellular infection, but the effectors involved remain poorly characterized. The SpvB cytotoxin has been shown to play a role in apoptosis in human macrophages by depolymerizing the actin cytoskeleton. A model for the role of bacteria-induced host cell death in Salmonella pathogenesis is proposed. In the intestine, the Salmonella SPI-1 TTSS and SipB mediate macrophage death by
caspase-1
activation, which also releases IL-1beta and IL-18, promoting inflammation and subsequent phagocytosis by incoming macrophages and leading to dissemination to systemic tissues. Intracellular secretion of virulence effector proteins by the SPI-2 TTSS facilitates growth of Salmonella in these macrophages and the delayed onset of apoptosis in extraintestinal tissues. These infected, apoptotic cells are targeted for engulfment by incoming macrophages, thus perpetuating the cycle of cell-to-cell spread that is the hallmark of systemic
Salmonella infection
.
...
PMID:The role of host cell death in Salmonella infections. 1579 54
Salmonella enterica are facultatively intracellular pathogens causing diseases with markedly visible signs of inflammation. During infection, Salmonella interacts with various host cell types, often resulting in death of those cells. Salmonella induces intestinal epithelial cell death via apoptosis, a cell death programme with a notably non-inflammatory outcome. In contrast, macrophage infection triggers
caspase-1
-dependent proinflammatory programmed cell death, a recently recognized process termed pyroptosis, which is distinguished from other forms of cellular demise by its unique mechanism, features and inflammatory outcome. Rapid macrophage pyroptosis depends on the Salmonella pathogenicity island-1 type III secretion system (T3SS) and flagella. Salmonella dynamically modulates induction of macrophage pyroptosis, and regulation of T3SS systems permits bacterial replication in specialized intracellular niches within macrophages. However, these infected macrophages later undergo a delayed form of
caspase-1
-dependent pyroptosis. Caspase-1-deficient mice are more susceptible to a number of bacterial infections, including
salmonellosis
, and pyroptosis is therefore considered a generalized protective host response to infection. Thus, Salmonella-induced pyroptosis serves as a model to understand a broadly important pathway of proinflammatory programmed host cell death: examining this system affords insight into mechanisms of both beneficial and pathological cell death and strategies employed by pathogens to modulate host responses.
...
PMID:Pyroptosis and host cell death responses during Salmonella infection. 1771 14
Caspase-1 cleaves the inactive IL-1beta and IL-18 precursors into active inflammatory cytokines. In Salmonella-infected macrophages,
caspase-1
also mediates a pathway of proinflammatory programmed cell death termed "pyroptosis." We demonstrate active
caspase-1
diffusely distributed in the cytoplasm and localized in discrete foci within macrophages responding to either
Salmonella infection
or intoxication by Bacillus anthracis lethal toxin (LT). Both stimuli triggered
caspase-1
-dependent lysis in macrophages and dendritic cells. Activation of
caspase-1
by LT required binding, uptake, and endosome acidification to mediate translocation of lethal factor (LF) into the host cell cytosol. Catalytically active LF cleaved cytosolic substrates and activated
caspase-1
by a mechanism involving proteasome activity and potassium efflux. LT activation of
caspase-1
is known to require the inflammasome adapter Nalp1. In contrast,
Salmonella infection
activated
caspase-1
through an independent pathway requiring the inflammasome adapter Ipaf. These distinct mechanisms of
caspase-1
activation converged on a common pathway of
caspase-1
-dependent cell death featuring DNA cleavage, cytokine activation, and, ultimately, cell lysis resulting from the formation of membrane pores between 1.1 and 2.4 nm in diameter and pathological ion fluxes that can be blocked by glycine. These findings demonstrate that distinct activation pathways elicit the conserved cell death effector mechanism of
caspase-1
-mediated pyroptosis and support the notion that this pathway of proinflammatory programmed cell death is broadly relevant to cell death and inflammation invoked by diverse stimuli.
...
PMID:Anthrax lethal toxin and Salmonella elicit the common cell death pathway of caspase-1-dependent pyroptosis via distinct mechanisms. 1833 99
The aspartate-specific cysteine protease
caspase-1
is activated by the inflammasomes and is responsible for the proteolytic maturation of the cytokines IL-1 beta and IL-18 during infection and inflammation. To discover new
caspase-1
substrates, we made use of a proteome-wide gel-free differential peptide sorting methodology that allows unambiguous localization of the processing site in addition to identification of the substrate. Of the 1022 proteins that were identified, 20 were found to be specifically cleaved after Asp in the setup incubated with recombinant
caspase-1
. Interestingly, caspase-7 emerged as one of the identified
caspase-1
substrates. Moreover half of the other identified cleavage events occurred at sites closely resembling the consensus caspase-7 recognition sequence DEVD, suggesting
caspase-1
-mediated activation of endogenous caspase-7 in this setup. Consistently recombinant
caspase-1
cleaved caspase-7 at the canonical activation sites Asp(23) and Asp(198), and recombinant caspase-7 processed a subset of the identified substrates. In vivo, caspase-7 activation was observed in conditions known to induce activation of
caspase-1
, including
Salmonella infection
and microbial stimuli combined with ATP. Interestingly Salmonella- and lipopolysaccharide + ATP-induced activation of caspase-7 was abolished in macrophages deficient in
caspase-1
, the pattern recognition receptors Ipaf and Cryopyrin, and the inflammasome adaptor ASC, demonstrating an upstream role for the
caspase-1
inflammasomes in caspase-7 activation in vivo. In contrast,
caspase-1
and the inflammasomes were not required for caspase-3 activation. In conclusion, we identified 20 new substrates activated downstream of
caspase-1
and validated
caspase-1
-mediated caspase-7 activation in vitro and in knock-out macrophages. These results demonstrate for the first time the existence of a nucleotide binding and oligomerization domain-like receptor/
caspase-1
/caspase-7 cascade and the existence of distinct activation mechanisms for caspase-3 and -7 in response to microbial stimuli and bacterial infection.
...
PMID:Targeted peptidecentric proteomics reveals caspase-7 as a substrate of the caspase-1 inflammasomes. 1866 12
Salmonella enterica serovar Choleraesuis (Salmonella Choleraesuis) causes a lethal systemic infection (
salmonellosis
) in swine. Live attenuated Salmonella Choleraesuis vaccines are effective in preventing the disease, and isolates of Salmonella Choleraesuis with mutations in the cAMP-receptor protein (CRP) gene (Salmonella Choleraesuis Deltacrp) are the most widely used, although the basis of the attenuation remains unclear. The objective of this study was to determine if the attenuated phenotype of Salmonella Choleraesuis Deltacrp was due to alterations in susceptibility to gastrointestinal factors such as pH and bile salts, ability to colonize or invade the intestine, or cytotoxicity for macrophages. Compared with the parental strain, the survival rate of Salmonella Choleraesuis Deltacrp at low pH or in the presence of bile salts was higher, while the ability of the mutant to invade intestinal epithelia was significantly decreased. In examining the role of CRP on the secretory function of the Salmonella pathogenicity island 1 (SPI-1) encoded type III secretion system (T3SS), it was shown that Salmonella Choleraesuis Deltacrp was unable to secrete the SPI-1 T3SS effector proteins, SopB and SipB, which play a role in Salmonella intestinal invasiveness and macrophage cytotoxicity, respectively. In addition,
caspase-1
dependent cytotoxicity for macrophages was significantly reduced in Salmonella Choleraesuis Deltacrp. Collectively, this study demonstrates that the CRP affects the secretory function of SPI-1 T3SS and the resulting ability to invade the host intestinal epithelium, which is a critical element in the pathogenesis of Salmonella Choleraesuis.
...
PMID:Mutations in the Salmonella enterica serovar Choleraesuis cAMP-receptor protein gene lead to functional defects in the SPI-1 Type III secretion system. 1977 95
Calcium-independent phospholipase A2 (iPLA2) has been suggested to play an important role in the activation of
caspase-1
induced by lipopolysaccharides (LPS). Here, we used pharmacological and genetic approaches to study the role of iPLA 2 in the activation of
caspase-1
. Bromoenol lactone (BEL), an inhibitor that was originally used to support a role for iPLA2 in the secretion of IL-1 beta, prevented
caspase-1
activation induced by LPS and ATP as described, and also activation triggered by
Salmonella infection
and cytosolic flagellin, which rely on the Nlrc4 inflammasome. Analysis of BEL enantiomers showed that the S-BEL form was more effective than R-BEL in inhibiting the inflammasome, suggesting a role for iPLA2 . However,
caspase-1
activation and IL-1 beta secretion and their inhibition by BEL were unimpaired in macrophages deficient in iPLA2 beta. BEL was originally identified as an inhibitor of serine proteases. Consistent with the latter, the serine proteases inhibitors TPCK, TLCK and AAF-cmk prevented the activation of the Nlrc4 and Nlrp3 inflammasomes while pan-cathepsin inhibitors were ineffective. These results indicate that iPLA2 beta is not critical for
caspase-1
activation as currently proposed. Instead, the results suggest that serine protease(s) targeted by BEL may play a critical role in the activation of the inflammasome triggered by microbial stimuli.
...
PMID:Calcium-independent phospholipase A2 beta is dispensable in inflammasome activation and its inhibition by bromoenol lactone. 2016 Sep
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