Bi-Directional Relationship Between Autophagy and Inflammasomes in Neurodegenerative Disorders.
Chinmaya PandaRajani Kanta MahapatraPublished in: Cellular and molecular neurobiology (2022)
The innate immune system, as the first line of cellular defense, triggers a protective response called inflammation when encountered with invading pathogens. Inflammasome is a multi-protein cytosolic signaling complex that induces inflammation and is critical for inflammation-induced pyroptotic cell death. Inflammasome activation has been found associated with neurodegenerative disorders (NDs), inflammatory diseases, and cancer. Autophagy is a crucial intracellular quality control and homeostasis process which removes the dysfunctional organelles, damaged proteins, and pathogens by sequestering the cytosolic components in a double-membrane vesicle, which eventually fuses with lysosome resulting in cargo degradation. Autophagy disruption has been observed in many NDs presented with persistent neuroinflammation and excessive inflammasome activation. An interplay between inflammation activation and the autophagy process has been realized over the last decade. In the case of NDs, autophagy regulates neuroinflammation load and cellular damage either by engulfing the misfolded protein deposits, dysfunctional mitochondria, or the inflammasome complex itself. A healthy two-way regulation between both cellular processes has been realized for cell survival and cell defense during inflammatory conditions. Therefore, clinical interest in the modulation of inflammasome activation by autophagy inducers is rapidly growing. In this review, we discuss the structural basis of inflammasome activation and the mechanistic ideas of the autophagy process in NDs. Along with comments on multiple ways of neuroinflammation regulation by microglial autophagy, we also present a perspective on pharmacological opportunities in this molecular interplay pertaining to NDs.
Keyphrases
- cell death
- oxidative stress
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- signaling pathway
- diabetic rats
- cell cycle arrest
- lipopolysaccharide induced
- traumatic brain injury
- stem cells
- immune response
- inflammatory response
- quality control
- lps induced
- gram negative
- mesenchymal stem cells
- small molecule
- spinal cord injury
- physical activity
- blood brain barrier
- cognitive impairment
- cell proliferation
- cell therapy
- single cell
- fluorescent probe
- squamous cell
- weight loss
- young adults
- innate immune
- multidrug resistant