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Familial Mediterranean fever mutations lift the obligatory requirement for microtubules in Pyrin inflammasome activation. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Familial Mediterranean fever (FMF) is a common genetic autoinflammatory disease linked to mutations in the Pyrin protein, but the exact effects of these mutations on immune signaling remain unclear.
  • Research identifies Clostridium difficile's enterotoxin A as a trigger for Pyrin activation and shows that microtubules regulate this process differently in wild-type versus FMF Pyrin.
  • FMF mutations allow Pyrin to activate without the usual reliance on microtubules, which enhances our understanding of the disease and may aid in future immunological assessments of FMF mutations.

Article Abstract

Familial Mediterranean fever (FMF) is the most common monogenic autoinflammatory disease worldwide. It is caused by mutations in the inflammasome adaptor Pyrin, but how FMF mutations alter signaling in FMF patients is unknown. Herein, we establish Clostridium difficile and its enterotoxin A (TcdA) as Pyrin-activating agents and show that wild-type and FMF Pyrin are differentially controlled by microtubules. Diverse microtubule assembly inhibitors prevented Pyrin-mediated caspase-1 activation and secretion of IL-1β and IL-18 from mouse macrophages and human peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs). Remarkably, Pyrin inflammasome activation persisted upon microtubule disassembly in PBMCs of FMF patients but not in cells of patients afflicted with other autoinflammatory diseases. We further demonstrate that microtubules control Pyrin activation downstream of Pyrin dephosphorylation and that FMF mutations enable microtubule-independent assembly of apoptosis-associated speck-like protein containing a caspase recruitment domain (ASC) micrometer-sized perinuclear structures (specks). The discovery that Pyrin mutations remove the obligatory requirement for microtubules in inflammasome activation provides a conceptual framework for understanding FMF and enables immunological screening of FMF mutations.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5167202PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1613156113DOI Listing

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