Publication | Open Access
Evolutionary loss of inflammasomes in the Carnivora and implications for the carriage of zoonotic infections
28
Citations
35
References
2021
Year
Parasitic DiseaseMicrobial PathogensInnate Immune SystemImmunologyImmune RegulationImmunologic MechanismInnate ImmunityImmune SystemZoonotic PathogensHost Immune ResponseInflammationHost ResponseZoonotic InfectionsImmunopathologySpecific PathogensParasitologyHost-pathogen InteractionsHost-parasite RelationshipEvolutionary ImmunologyHumoral ImmunityImmune FunctionAnimal VirusBiologyMolecular ImmunologyZoonotic DiseasesNatural SciencesEvolutionary LossPathogenesisEvolutionary BiologyZoonotic DiseaseHost Immune GenesMedicineViral Immunity
Zoonotic pathogens, such as COVID-19, reside in animal hosts before jumping species to infect humans. The Carnivora, like mink, carry many zoonoses, yet how diversity in host immune genes across species affect pathogen carriage is poorly understood. Here, we describe a progressive evolutionary downregulation of pathogen-sensing inflammasome pathways in Carnivora. This includes the loss of nucleotide-oligomerization domain leucine-rich repeat receptors (NLRs), acquisition of a unique caspase-1/-4 effector fusion protein that processes gasdermin D pore formation without inducing rapid lytic cell death, and the formation of a caspase-8 containing inflammasome that inefficiently processes interleukin-1β. Inflammasomes regulate gut immunity, but the carnivorous diet has antimicrobial properties that could compensate for the loss of these immune pathways. We speculate that the consequences of systemic inflammasome downregulation, however, can impair host sensing of specific pathogens such that they can reside undetected in the Carnivora.
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