Back to Search Start Over

Necroptosis suppresses inflammation via termination of TNF- or LPS-induced cytokine and chemokine production

Authors :
Ed C. Lavelle
Conor J. Kearney
Conor M. Henry
Seamus J. Martin
Graham A. Tynan
Danielle M. Clancy
Sean P. Cullen
Source :
Cell Death & Differentiation. 22:1313-1327
Publication Year :
2015
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2015.

Abstract

TNF promotes a regulated form of necrosis, called necroptosis, upon inhibition of caspase activity in cells expressing RIPK3. Because necrosis is generally more pro-inflammatory than apoptosis, it is widely presumed that TNF-induced necroptosis may be detrimental in vivo due to excessive inflammation. However, because TNF is intrinsically highly pro-inflammatory, due to its ability to trigger the production of multiple cytokines and chemokines, rapid cell death via necroptosis may blunt rather than enhance TNF-induced inflammation. Here we show that TNF-induced necroptosis potently suppressed the production of multiple TNF-induced pro-inflammatory factors due to RIPK3-dependent cell death. Similarly, necroptosis also suppressed LPS-induced pro-inflammatory cytokine production. Consistent with these observations, supernatants from TNF-stimulated cells were more pro-inflammatory than those from TNF-induced necroptotic cells in vivo. Thus necroptosis attenuates TNF- and LPS-driven inflammation, which may benefit intracellular pathogens that evoke this mode of cell death by suppressing host immune responses.

Details

ISSN :
14765403 and 13509047
Volume :
22
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Cell Death & Differentiation
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....1c76ad0cc30054fb7374214206e80877
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/cdd.2014.222