Veterinary Research (Jun 2023)

NDV-induced autophagy enhances inflammation through NLRP3/Caspase-1 inflammasomes and the p38/MAPK pathway

  • Juncheng Cai,
  • Siyuan Wang,
  • Haoyun Du,
  • Lei Fan,
  • WeiFeng Yuan,
  • Qiufan Xu,
  • Jinlian Ren,
  • Qiuyan Lin,
  • Bin Xiang,
  • Chan Ding,
  • Tao Ren,
  • Libin Chen

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s13567-023-01174-w
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 54, no. 1
pp. 1 – 15

Abstract

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Abstract Newcastle disease (ND), caused by the Newcastle disease virus (NDV), is a highly virulent infectious disease of poultry. Virulent NDV can cause severe autophagy and inflammation in host cells. While studies have shown a mutual regulatory relationship between autophagy and inflammation, this relationship in NDV infection remains unclear. This study confirmed that NDV infection could trigger autophagy in DF-1 cells to promote cytopathic and viral replication. NDV-induced autophagy was positively correlated with the mRNA levels of inflammatory cytokines such as IL-1β, IL-8, IL-18, CCL-5, and TNF-α, suggesting that NDV-induced autophagy promotes the expression of inflammatory cytokines. Further investigation demonstrated that NLRP3 protein expression, Caspase-1 activity, and p38 phosphorylation level positively correlated with autophagy, suggesting that NDV-induced autophagy could promote the expression of inflammatory cytokines through NLRP3/Caspase-1 inflammasomes and p38/MAPK pathway. In addition, NDV infection also triggered mitochondrial damage and mitophagy in DF-1 cells, but did not result in a large leakage of reactive oxygen species (ROS) and mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA), indicating that mitochondrial damage and mitophagy do not contribute to the inflammation response during NDV infection.

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