Cell Reports (Feb 2020)

Non-canonical Caspase-1 Signaling Drives RIP2-Dependent and TNF-α-Mediated Inflammation In Vivo

  • Sören Reinke,
  • Mary Linge,
  • Hans H. Diebner,
  • Hella Luksch,
  • Silke Glage,
  • Anne Gocht,
  • Avril A.B. Robertson,
  • Matthew A. Cooper,
  • Sigrun R. Hofmann,
  • Ronald Naumann,
  • Mihail Sarov,
  • Rayk Behrendt,
  • Axel Roers,
  • Frank Pessler,
  • Joachim Roesler,
  • Angela Rösen-Wolff,
  • Stefan Winkler

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 30, no. 8
pp. 2501 – 2511.e5

Abstract

Read online

Summary: Pro-inflammatory caspase-1 is a key player in innate immunity. Caspase-1 processes interleukin (IL)-1β and IL-18 to their mature forms and triggers pyroptosis. These caspase-1 functions are linked to its enzymatic activity. However, loss-of-function missense mutations in CASP1 do not prevent autoinflammation in patients, despite decreased IL-1β production. In vitro data suggest that enzymatically inactive caspase-1 drives inflammation via enhanced nuclear factor κB (NF-κB) activation, independent of IL-1β processing. Here, we report two mouse models of enzymatically inactive caspase-1-C284A, demonstrating the relevance of this pathway in vivo. In contrast to Casp1−/− mice, caspase-1-C284A mice show pronounced hypothermia and increased levels of the pro-inflammatory cytokines tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-α) and IL-6 when challenged with lipopolysaccharide (LPS). Caspase-1-C284A signaling is RIP2 dependent and mediated by TNF-α but independent of the NLRP3 inflammasome. LPS-stimulated whole blood from patients carrying loss-of-function missense mutations in CASP1 secretes higher amounts of TNF-α. Taken together, these results reveal non-canonical caspase-1 signaling in vivo. : Reinke et al. show that enzymatically inactive caspase-1-C284A mediates non-canonical caspase-1 signaling. This pathway is RIP2 dependent and mediated by TNF-α but independent from IL-1 cytokines. Keywords: caspase-1, Rip2, NF-κB, TNF-α, non-canonical caspase-1 signaling, enzymatic activity