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Innate immune sensing of bacterial modifications of Rho GTPases by the Pyrin inflammasome.
[familial mediterranean fever]
Cytosolic
inflammasome
complexes
mediated
by
a
pattern
recognition
receptor
(
PRR
)
defend
against
pathogen
infection
by
activating
caspase
1
.
Pyrin
,
a
candidate
PRR
,
can
bind
to
the
inflammasome
adaptor
ASC
to
form
a
caspase
1
-
activating
complex
.
Mutations
in
the
Pyrin-encoding
gene
,
MEFV
,
cause
a
human
autoinflammatory
disease
known
as
familial
Mediterranean
fever
.
Despite
important
roles
in
immunity
and
disease
,
the
physiological
function
of
Pyrin
remains
unknown
.
Here
we
show
that
Pyrin
mediates
caspase
1
inflammasome
activation
in
response
to
Rho-glucosylation
activity
of
cytotoxin
TcdB
,
a
major
virulence
factor
of
Clostridium
difficile
,
which
causes
most
cases
of
nosocomial
diarrhoea
.
The
glucosyltransferase-inactive
TcdB
mutant
loses
the
inflammasome-stimulating
activity
.
Other
Rho-inactivating
toxins
,
including
FIC-domain
adenylyltransferases
(
Vibrio
parahaemolyticus
VopS
and
Histophilus
somni
IbpA
)
and
Clostridium
botulinum
ADP-ribosylating
C
3
toxin
,
can
also
biochemically
activate
the
Pyrin
inflammasome
in
their
enzymatic
activity-dependent
manner
.
These
toxins
all
target
the
Rho
subfamily
and
modify
a
switch-
I
residue
.
We
further
demonstrate
that
Burkholderia
cenocepacia
inactivates
RHOA
by
deamidating
Asn
 
41
,
also
in
the
switch-
I
region
,
and
thereby
triggers
Pyrin
inflammasome
activation
,
both
of
which
require
the
bacterial
type
VI
secretion
system
(
T
6
SS
)
.
Loss
of
the
Pyrin
inflammasome
causes
elevated
intra-macrophage
growth
of
B
.
cenocepacia
and
diminished
lung
inflammation
in
mice
.
Thus
,
Pyrin
functions
to
sense
pathogen
modification
and
inactivation
of
Rho
GTPases
,
representing
a
new
paradigm
in
mammalian
innate
immunity
.
Diseases
Validation
Diseases presenting
"diminished lung inflammation in mice"
symptom
familial mediterranean fever
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