Interferon-γ primes macrophages for pathogen ligand-induced killing via a caspase-8 and mitochondrial cell death pathway.

Daniel S Simpson, Jiyi Pang, Ashley Weir,Isabella Y Kong, Melanie Fritsch,Maryam Rashidi,James P Cooney,Kathryn C Davidson, Mary Speir,Tirta M Djajawi, Sebastian Hughes,Liana Mackiewicz, Merle Dayton,Holly Anderton, Marcel Doerflinger,Yexuan Deng,Allan Shuai Huang,Stephanie A Conos, Hazel Tye,Seong H Chow, Arfatur Rahman, Raymond S Norton, Thomas Naderer, Sandra E Nicholson, Gaetan Burgio, Si Ming Man, Joanna R Groom, Marco J Herold, Edwin D Hawkins, Kate E Lawlor, Andreas Strasser, John Silke, Marc Pellegrini, Hamid Kashkar, Rebecca Feltham, James E Vince

Immunity(2022)

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摘要
Cell death plays an important role during pathogen infections. Here, we report that interferon-γ (IFNγ) sensitizes macrophages to Toll-like receptor (TLR)-induced death that requires macrophage-intrinsic death ligands and caspase-8 enzymatic activity, which trigger the mitochondrial apoptotic effectors, BAX and BAK. The pro-apoptotic caspase-8 substrate BID was dispensable for BAX and BAK activation. Instead, caspase-8 reduced pro-survival BCL-2 transcription and increased inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS), thus facilitating BAX and BAK signaling. IFNγ-primed, TLR-induced macrophage killing required iNOS, which licensed apoptotic caspase-8 activity and reduced the BAX and BAK inhibitors, A1 and MCL-1. The deletion of iNOS or caspase-8 limited SARS-CoV-2-induced disease in mice, while caspase-8 caused lethality independent of iNOS in a model of hemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis. These findings reveal that iNOS selectively licenses programmed cell death, which may explain how nitric oxide impacts disease severity in SARS-CoV-2 infection and other iNOS-associated inflammatory conditions.
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