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Caspase-12 Dampens the Immune Response to Malaria...
Journal article

Caspase-12 Dampens the Immune Response to Malaria Independently of the Inflammasome by Targeting NF-κB Signaling

Abstract

Pathogen sensing by the inflammasome activates inflammatory caspases that mediate inflammation and cell death. Caspase-12 antagonizes the inflammasome and NF-κB and is associated with susceptibility to bacterial sepsis. A single-nucleotide polymorphism (T(125)C) in human Casp12 restricts its expression to Africa, Southeast Asia, and South America. Here, we investigated the role of caspase-12 in the control of parasite replication and pathogenesis in malaria and report that caspase-12 dampened parasite clearance in blood-stage malaria and modulated susceptibility to cerebral malaria. This response was independent of the caspase-1 inflammasome, as casp1(-/-) mice were indistinguishable from wild-type animals in response to malaria, but dependent on enhanced NF-κB activation. Mechanistically, caspase-12 competed with NEMO for association with IκB kinase-α/β, effectively preventing the formation of the IκB kinase complex and inhibiting downstream transcriptional activation by NF-κB. Systemic inhibition of NF-κB or Ab neutralization of IFN-γ reversed the increased resistance of casp12(-/-) mice to blood-stage malaria infection.

Authors

Labbé K; Miu J; Yeretssian G; Serghides L; Tam M; Finney CA; Erdman LK; Goulet M-L; Kain KC; Stevenson MM

Journal

The Journal of Immunology, Vol. 185, No. 9, pp. 5495–5502

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Publication Date

November 1, 2010

DOI

10.4049/jimmunol.1002517

ISSN

0022-1767

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