Epithelial Gasdermin D shapes the host-microbial interface by driving mucus layer formation.
Jian ZhangQianzhou YuDanlu JiangKang YuWeiwei YuZhexu ChiSheng ChenMobai LiDehang YangZhen WangTing XuXingchen GuoKailian ZhangHui FangQizhen YeYong HeXue ZhangDi WangPublished in: Science immunology (2022)
Goblet cells and their main secretory product, mucus, play crucial roles in orchestrating the colonic host-microbe interactions that help maintain gut homeostasis. However, the precise intracellular machinery underlying this goblet cell-induced mucus secretion remains poorly understood. Gasdermin D (GSDMD) is a recently identified pore-forming effector protein that causes pyroptosis, a lytic proinflammatory type of cell death occurring during various pathophysiological conditions. Here, we reveal an unexpected function of GSDMD in goblet cell mucin secretion and mucus layer formation. Specific deletion of Gsdmd in intestinal epithelial cells (Δ IEC ) led to abrogated mucus secretion with a concomitant loss of the mucus layer. This impaired colonic mucus layer in Gsdmd Δ IEC mice featured a disturbed host-microbial interface and inefficient clearance of enteric pathogens from the mucosal surface. Mechanistically, stimulation of goblet cells activates caspases to process GSDMD via reactive oxygen species production; in turn, this activated GSDMD drives mucin secretion through calcium ion-dependent scinderin-mediated cortical F-actin disassembly, which is a key step in granule exocytosis. This study links epithelial GSDMD to the secretory granule exocytotic pathway and highlights its physiological nonpyroptotic role in shaping mucosal homeostasis in the gut.
Keyphrases
- cell death
- cell cycle arrest
- induced apoptosis
- reactive oxygen species
- single cell
- ulcerative colitis
- cell therapy
- dendritic cells
- stem cells
- signaling pathway
- gene expression
- immune response
- high glucose
- sensitive detection
- insulin resistance
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- amino acid
- protein protein
- multidrug resistant
- bone marrow
- adipose tissue
- gram negative
- skeletal muscle
- drug induced
- nlrp inflammasome
- quantum dots
- antimicrobial resistance
- wild type
- type iii
- high fat diet induced