Interleukin-1α Activity in Necrotic Endothelial Cells Is Controlled by Caspase-1 Cleavage of Interleukin-1 Receptor-2

Inflammation is a key instigator of the immune responses that drive atherosclerosis and allograft rejection. IL-1α, a powerful cytokine that activates both innate and adaptive immunity, induces vessel inflammation after release from necrotic vascular smooth muscle cells (VSMCs). Similarly, IL-1α rel...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Journal of biological chemistry 2015-10, Vol.290 (41), p.25188-25196
Hauptverfasser: Burzynski, Laura C., Humphry, Melanie, Bennett, Martin R., Clarke, Murray C.H.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Inflammation is a key instigator of the immune responses that drive atherosclerosis and allograft rejection. IL-1α, a powerful cytokine that activates both innate and adaptive immunity, induces vessel inflammation after release from necrotic vascular smooth muscle cells (VSMCs). Similarly, IL-1α released from endothelial cells (ECs) damaged during transplant drives allograft rejection. However, IL-1α requires cleavage for full cytokine activity, and what controls cleavage in necrotic ECs is currently unknown. We find that ECs have very low levels of IL-1α activity upon necrosis. However, TNFα or IL-1 induces significant levels of active IL-1α in EC necrotic lysates without alteration in protein levels. Increased activity requires cleavage of IL-1α by calpain to the more active mature form. Immunofluorescence and proximity ligation assays show that IL-1α associates with interleukin-1 receptor-2, and this association is decreased by TNFα or IL-1 and requires caspase activity. Thus, TNFα or IL-1 treatment of ECs leads to caspase proteolytic activity that cleaves interleukin-1 receptor-2, allowing IL-1α dissociation and subsequent processing by calpain. Importantly, ECs could be primed by IL-1α from adjacent damaged VSMCs, and necrotic ECs could activate neighboring normal ECs and VSMCs, causing them to release inflammatory cytokines and up-regulate adhesion molecules, thus amplifying inflammation. These data unravel the molecular mechanisms and interplay between damaged ECs and VSMCs that lead to activation of IL-1α and, thus, initiation of adaptive responses that cause graft rejection. Background: IL-1α released from damaged endothelial cells (ECs) drives inflammation and chronic graft rejection. How ECs activate IL-1α is unknown. Results: Generation of active IL-1α in ECs requires caspase-1 proteolysis of an inhibitory complex that releases IL-1α and enables calpain cleavage to the mature cytokine. Conclusion: IL-1α is controlled post-translationally in ECs. Significance: Multiple targets exist to prevent IL-1α activation during disease.
ISSN:0021-9258
1083-351X
DOI:10.1074/jbc.M115.667915