Oxylipins and metabolites from pyroptotic cells act as promoters of tissue repair.
Parul MehrotraSophia MaschalidiLaura BoeckaertsChristian MaueröderRochelle TixeiraJonathan PinneyJavier Burgoa CardásVladimir SukhovYunus IncikChristopher J AndersonBing HuBurcu N KeçeliAmanda GoncalvesLieselotte Vande WalleNina Van OpdenboschAlexey A SergushichevEsther HosteUmang JainMohamed LamkanfiKodi S RavichandranPublished in: Nature (2024)
Pyroptosis is a lytic cell death mode that helps limit the spread of infections and is also linked to pathology in sterile inflammatory diseases and autoimmune diseases 1-4 . During pyroptosis, inflammasome activation and the engagement of caspase-1 lead to cell death, along with the maturation and secretion of the inflammatory cytokine interleukin-1β (IL-1β). The dominant effect of IL-1β in promoting tissue inflammation has clouded the potential influence of other factors released from pyroptotic cells. Here, using a system in which macrophages are induced to undergo pyroptosis without IL-1β or IL-1α release (denoted Pyro -1 ), we identify unexpected beneficial effects of the Pyro -1 secretome. First, we noted that the Pyro -1 supernatants upregulated gene signatures linked to migration, cellular proliferation and wound healing. Consistent with this gene signature, Pyro -1 supernatants boosted migration of primary fibroblasts and macrophages, and promoted faster wound closure in vitro and improved tissue repair in vivo. In mechanistic studies, lipidomics and metabolomics of the Pyro -1 supernatants identified the presence of both oxylipins and metabolites, linking them to pro-wound-healing effects. Focusing specifically on the oxylipin prostaglandin E 2 (PGE 2 ), we find that its synthesis is induced de novo during pyroptosis, downstream of caspase-1 activation and cyclooxygenase-2 activity; further, PGE 2 synthesis occurs late in pyroptosis, with its release dependent on gasdermin D pores opened during pyroptosis. As for the pyroptotic metabolites, they link to immune cell infiltration into the wounds, and polarization to CD301 + macrophages. Collectively, these data advance the concept that the pyroptotic secretome possesses oxylipins and metabolites with tissue repair properties that may be harnessed therapeutically.
Keyphrases
- cell death
- cell cycle arrest
- induced apoptosis
- nlrp inflammasome
- wound healing
- oxidative stress
- ms ms
- signaling pathway
- diabetic rats
- high glucose
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- mass spectrometry
- endothelial cells
- copy number
- gene expression
- social media
- drug induced
- climate change
- human health
- anti inflammatory
- surgical site infection
- case control
- genome wide analysis