Publications by authors named "Daniel C Akuma"

Article Synopsis
  • * Caspase-11 is a specific inflammatory caspase that gets activated by bacterial LPS, leading to its aggregation and the cleavage of gasdermin D, which causes a form of cell death known as pyroptosis.
  • * Research found that the activation and self-processing of Caspase-11 are essential for its assembly into speckles in macrophages in response to LPS, indicating a crucial role for its enzymatic activity in inflammasome organization.
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Immune sensing of the Gram-negative bacterial membrane glycolipid lipopolysaccharide (LPS) is both a critical component of host defense against bacterial infection and a contributor to the hyperinflammatory response, potentially leading to sepsis and death. Innate immune activation by LPS is due to the lipid A moiety, an acylated di-glucosamine molecule that can activate inflammatory responses via the extracellular sensor Toll-like receptor 4 (TLR4)/myeloid differentiation 2 (MD2) or the cytosolic sensor caspase-11 (Casp11). The number and length of acyl chains present on bacterial lipid A structures vary across bacterial species and strains, which affects the magnitude of TLR4 and Casp11 activation.

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The yellow fever mosquito, Aedes aegypti, has three genes that code for proteins with sequence similarity to vertebrate Na-K-Cl cotransporters (NKCCs) of the solute-linked carrier 12 superfamily of cation-chloride cotransporters (CCCs). We hypothesized that these mosquito NKCC orthologues have diverged to perform distinct roles in salt secretion and absorption. In phylogenetic analyses, one protein (aeNKCC1) groups with a Drosophila melanogaster NKCC that mediates salt secretion whereas two others (aeCCC2 and aeCCC3) group with a Drosophila transporter that is not functionally characterized.

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