An Anti-Inflammatory Role for NLRP10 in Murine Cutaneous Leishmaniasis

The role of the nucleotide-binding domain and leucine-rich repeat containing receptor NLRP10 in disease is incompletely understood. Using three mouse strains lacking the gene encoding NLRP10, only one of which had a coincidental mutation in DOCK8, we documented a role for NLRP10 as a suppressor of t...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Journal of immunology (1950) 2017-10, Vol.199 (8), p.2823-2833
Hauptverfasser: Clay, Gwendolyn M, Valadares, Diogo G, Graff, Joel W, Ulland, Tyler K, Davis, Richard E, Scorza, Breanna M, Zhanbolat, Bayan Sudan, Chen, Yani, Sutterwala, Fayyaz S, Wilson, Mary E
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The role of the nucleotide-binding domain and leucine-rich repeat containing receptor NLRP10 in disease is incompletely understood. Using three mouse strains lacking the gene encoding NLRP10, only one of which had a coincidental mutation in DOCK8, we documented a role for NLRP10 as a suppressor of the cutaneous inflammatory response to infection. There was no evidence that the enhanced local inflammation was due to enhanced inflammasome activity. NLRP10/DOCK8-deficient mice harbored lower parasite burdens at the cutaneous site of inoculation compared with wild-type controls, whereas NLRP10-deficient mice and controls had similar parasite loads, suggesting that DOCK8 promotes local growth of parasites in the skin, whereas NLRP10 does not. NLRP10-deficient mice developed vigorous adaptive immune responses, indicating that there was not a global defect in the development of Ag-specific cytokine production. Bone marrow chimeras showed that the anti-inflammatory role of NLRP10 was mediated by NLRP10 expressed in resident cells in the skin rather than by bone marrow-derived cells. These data suggest a novel role for NLRP10 in the resolution of local inflammatory responses during infection.
ISSN:0022-1767
1550-6606
DOI:10.4049/jimmunol.1500832