ASC filament formation serves as a signal amplification mechanism for inflammasomes

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Abstract

A hallmark of inflammasome activation is the ASC speck, a micrometre-sized structure formed by the inflammasome adaptor protein ASC (apoptosis-Associated speck-like protein containing a CARD), which consists of a pyrin domain (PYD) and a caspase recruitment domain (CARD). Here we show that assembly of the ASC speck involves oligomerization of ASC PYD into filaments and cross-linking of these filaments by ASC CARD. ASC mutants with a non-functional CARD only assemble filaments but not specks, and moreover disrupt endogenous specks in primary macrophages. Systematic site-directed mutagenesis of ASC PYD is used to identify oligomerization-deficient ASC mutants and demonstrate that ASC speck formation is required for efficient processing of IL-1β, but dispensable for gasdermin-D cleavage and pyroptosis induction. Our results suggest that the oligomerization of ASC creates a multitude of potential caspase-1 activation sites, thus serving as a signal amplification mechanism for inflammasome-mediated cytokine production.

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Dick, M. S., Sborgi, L., Rühl, S., Hiller, S., & Broz, P. (2016). ASC filament formation serves as a signal amplification mechanism for inflammasomes. Nature Communications, 7. https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms11929

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