Novel extracellular and nuclear caspase-1 and inflammasomes propagate inflammation and regulate gene expression: a comprehensive database mining study
Genre
Journal articleDate
2016-11-14Author
wang, luqiao
Fu, Hangfei
Nanayakkara, Gayani
Li, Yafeng
Shao, Ying

Johnson, Candice
Cheng, Jiali
Yang, William Y.
Yang, Fan
Lavallee, Muriel
Xu, Yanjie
Cheng, Xiaoshu
Xi, Hang
Yi, Jonathan
Yu, Jun

Choi, Eric T.
Wang, Hong

Yang, Xiaofeng

Group
Centers for Metabolic Disease Research (Temple University)Cardiovascular Research and Thrombosis Research (Temple University)
Department
PharmacologySurgery
Physiology
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http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12613/8747
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https://doi.org/10.1186/s13045-016-0351-5Abstract
Background: Caspase-1 is present in the cytosol as an inactive zymogen and requires the protein complexes named “inflammasomes” for proteolytic activation. However, it remains unclear whether the proteolytic activity of caspase-1 is confined only to the cytosol where inflammasomes are assembled to convert inactive pro-caspase-1 to active caspase-1. Methods: We conducted meticulous data analysis method s on proteomic, protein interaction, protein intracellular localization, and gene expressions of 114 experimentally identified caspase-1 substrates and 38 caspase-1 interaction proteins in normal physiological conditions and in various pathologies. Results: We made the following important findings: (1) Caspase-1 substrates and interaction proteins are localized in various intracellular organelles including nucleus and secreted extracellularly; (2) Caspase-1 may get activated in situ in the nucleus in response to intra-nuclear danger signals; (3) Caspase-1 cleaves its substrates in exocytotic secretory pathways including exosomes to propagate inflammation to neighboring and remote cells; (4) Most of caspase-1 substrates are upregulated in coronary artery disease regardless of their subcellular localization but the majority of metabolic diseases cause no significant expression changes in caspase-1 nuclear substrates; and (5) In coronary artery disease, majority of upregulated caspase-1 extracellular substrate-related pathways are involved in induction of inflammation; and in contrast, upregulated caspase-1 nuclear substrate-related pathways are more involved in regulating cell death and chromatin regulation. Conclusions: Our identification of novel caspase-1 trafficking sites, nuclear and extracellular inflammasomes, and extracellular caspase-1-based inflammation propagation model provides a list of targets for the future development of new therapeutics to treat cardiovascular diseases, inflammatory diseases, and inflammatory cancers.Citation
Wang, L., Fu, H., Nanayakkara, G. et al. Novel extracellular and nuclear caspase-1 and inflammasomes propagate inflammation and regulate gene expression: a comprehensive database mining study. J Hematol Oncol 9, 122 (2016). https://doi.org/10.1186/s13045-016-0351-5Citation to related work
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Journal of Hematology & Oncology, Vol. 9ADA compliance
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http://dx.doi.org/10.34944/dspace/8711