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Cleavage of cFLIP restrains cell death during viral infection and tissue injury and favors tissue repair.

Kristel Martinez LagunasDeniz Pinar SavcigilMatea ZrilicCarlos Carvajal FraileAndrew CraxtonEmily SelfIratxe Uranga-MurilloDiego de MiguelMaykel AriasSebastian WillenborgMichael PiekarekMarie Christine AlbertKalvin NugrahaIna LisewskiErika JanakovaNatalia IgualWulf TonnusXimena HildebrandtMohammed IbrahimMarlies BallegeerXavier SaelensAndrew KuehPascal MeierAndreas LinkermannJulian PardoSabine A EmingHenning WalczakMarion MacFarlaneNieves PeltzerAlessandro Annibaldi
Published in: Science advances (2023)
Cell death coordinates repair programs following pathogen attack and tissue injury. However, aberrant cell death can interfere with such programs and cause organ failure. Cellular FLICE-like inhibitory protein (cFLIP) is a crucial regulator of cell death and a substrate of Caspase-8. However, the physiological role of cFLIP cleavage by Caspase-8 remains elusive. Here, we found an essential role for cFLIP cleavage in restraining cell death in different pathophysiological scenarios. Mice expressing a cleavage-resistant cFLIP mutant, Cflip D377A , exhibited increased sensitivity to severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus (SARS-CoV)-induced lethality, impaired skin wound healing, and increased tissue damage caused by Sharpin deficiency. In vitro, abrogation of cFLIP cleavage sensitizes cells to tumor necrosis factor(TNF)-induced necroptosis and apoptosis by favoring complex-II formation. Mechanistically, the cell death-sensitizing effect of the D377A mutation depends on glutamine-469. These results reveal a crucial role for cFLIP cleavage in controlling the amplitude of cell death responses occurring upon tissue stress to ensure the execution of repair programs.
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