Publication | Open Access
NINJ1 mediates plasma membrane rupture during lytic cell death
23
Citations
35
References
2020
Year
Unknown Venue
ApoptosisImmunologyCell DeathCell Death MechanismsCellular PhysiologyNeuroinflammationInflammationReactive Nitrogen SpecieDegenerative PathologyCell Surface ProteinProtein DegradationCell SignalingMolecular SignalingInflammatory ResponseCellular BiologyPlasma Membrane RuptureCell BiologyLactate DehydrogenaseCellular BiochemistryMedicineNitrosative Stress
<title>Abstract</title> Plasma membrane rupture (PMR) is the final cataclysmic event in lytic cell death. PMR releases intracellular molecules termed damage-associated molecular patterns (DAMPs) that propagate the inflammatory response. The underlying mechanism for PMR, however, is unknown. Here we show that the ill-characterized nerve injury-induced protein 1 (NINJ1) — a cell surface protein with two transmembrane regions — plays an essential role in the induction of PMR. A forward-genetic screen of randomly mutagenized mice linked NINJ1 to PMR. Ninj1–/– macrophages exhibited impaired PMR in response to diverse inducers of pyroptotic, necrotic and apoptotic cell death, and failed to release numerous intracellular proteins including High Mobility Group Box 1 (HMGB1, a known DAMP) and Lactate Dehydrogenase (LDH, a standard measure of PMR). Ninj1–/– macrophages died, but with a distinctive and persistent ballooned morphology, attributable to defective disintegration of bubble-like herniations. Ninj1–/– mice were more susceptible than wild-type mice to Citrobacter rodentium, suggesting a role for PMR in anti-bacterial host defense. Mechanistically, NINJ1 utilized an evolutionarily conserved extracellular α-helical domain for oligomerization and subsequent PMR. The discovery of NINJ1 as a mediator of PMR overturns the long-held dogma that cell death-related PMR is a passive event. Pyroptosis is a potent inflammatory mode of lytic cell death triggered by diverse infectious and sterile insults1-3. It is driven by the pore-forming fragment of gasdermin D (GSDMD)4-7 and releases two exemplar proteins: interleukin-1β (IL-1β), a pro-inflammatory cytokine, and LDH, a standard marker of PMR and lytic cell death. An early landmark study8 predicted two sequential steps for pyroptosis: (1) initial formation of a small plasma membrane pore causing IL-1β release and non-selective ionic fluxes, and (2) subsequent PMR attributable to oncotic cell swelling. PMR releases LDH (140 kDa) and large DAMPs. While the predicted size of gasdermin pores (~18 nm inner diameter9) is large enough to release IL-1β (17 kDa, ~4.5 nm diameter), the underlying mechanism for subsequent PMR has been considered a passive osmotic lysis event.
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