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TNFR1-dependent cell death drives inflammation in Sharpin-deficient mice

Authors :
James A Rickard
Holly Anderton
Nima Etemadi
Ueli Nachbur
Maurice Darding
Nieves Peltzer
Najoua Lalaoui
Kate E Lawlor
Hannah Vanyai
Cathrine Hall
Aleks Bankovacki
Lahiru Gangoda
Wendy Wei-Lynn Wong
Jason Corbin
Chunzi Huang
Edward S Mocarski
James M Murphy
Warren S Alexander
Anne K Voss
David L Vaux
William J Kaiser
Henning Walczak
John Silke
Source :
eLife, Vol 3 (2014)
Publication Year :
2014
Publisher :
eLife Sciences Publications Ltd, 2014.

Abstract

SHARPIN regulates immune signaling and contributes to full transcriptional activity and prevention of cell death in response to TNF in vitro. The inactivating mouse Sharpin cpdm mutation causes TNF-dependent multi-organ inflammation, characterized by dermatitis, liver inflammation, splenomegaly, and loss of Peyer's patches. TNF-dependent cell death has been proposed to cause the inflammatory phenotype and consistent with this we show Tnfr1, but not Tnfr2, deficiency suppresses the phenotype (and it does so more efficiently than Il1r1 loss). TNFR1-induced apoptosis can proceed through caspase-8 and BID, but reduction in or loss of these players generally did not suppress inflammation, although Casp8 heterozygosity significantly delayed dermatitis. Ripk3 or Mlkl deficiency partially ameliorated the multi-organ phenotype, and combined Ripk3 deletion and Casp8 heterozygosity almost completely suppressed it, even restoring Peyer's patches. Unexpectedly, Sharpin, Ripk3 and Casp8 triple deficiency caused perinatal lethality. These results provide unexpected insights into the developmental importance of SHARPIN.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2050084X
Volume :
3
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
eLife
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.7dcb5894674dcf8834bbc332067b93
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.03464