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Streptococcal pyrogenic exotoxin B cleaves GSDMA and triggers pyroptosis

Authors :
Deng, Wanyan
Bai, Yang
Deng, Fan
Pan, Youdong
Mei, Shenglin
Zheng, Zengzhang
Min, Rui
Wu, Zeyu
Li, Wu
Miao, Rui
Zhang, Zhibin
Kupper, Thomas S.
Lieberman, Judy
Liu, Xing
Source :
Nature; 20220101, Issue: Preprints p1-7, 7p
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Gasdermins, a family of five pore-forming proteins (GSDMA–GSDME) in humans expressed predominantly in the skin, mucosa and immune sentinel cells, are key executioners of inflammatory cell death (pyroptosis), which recruits immune cells to infection sites and promotes protective immunity1,2. Pore formation is triggered by gasdermin cleavage1,2. Although the proteases that activate GSDMB, C, D and E have been identified, how GSDMA—the dominant gasdermin in the skin—is activated, remains unknown. Streptococcus pyogenes, also known as group A Streptococcus(GAS), is a major skin pathogen that causes substantial morbidity and mortality worldwide3. Here we show that the GAS cysteine protease SpeB virulence factor triggers keratinocyte pyroptosis by cleaving GSDMA after Gln246, unleashing an active N-terminal fragment that triggers pyroptosis. Gsdma1genetic deficiency blunts mouse immune responses to GAS, resulting in uncontrolled bacterial dissemination and death. GSDMA acts as both a sensor and substrate of GAS SpeB and as an effector to trigger pyroptosis, adding a simple one-molecule mechanism for host recognition and control of virulence of a dangerous microbial pathogen.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00280836 and 14764687
Issue :
Preprints
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Nature
Publication Type :
Periodical
Accession number :
ejs58844574
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-021-04384-4