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Caspase-11–mediated endothelial pyroptosis underlies endotoxemia-induced lung injury
Kwong Tai Cheng, … , Jalees Rehman, Asrar B. Malik
Kwong Tai Cheng, … , Jalees Rehman, Asrar B. Malik
Published October 9, 2017
Citation Information: J Clin Invest. 2017;127(11):4124-4135. https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI94495.
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Research Article Pulmonology Vascular biology

Caspase-11–mediated endothelial pyroptosis underlies endotoxemia-induced lung injury

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Abstract

Acute lung injury is a leading cause of death in bacterial sepsis due to the wholesale destruction of the lung endothelial barrier, which results in protein-rich lung edema, influx of proinflammatory leukocytes, and intractable hypoxemia. Pyroptosis is a form of programmed lytic cell death that is triggered by inflammatory caspases, but little is known about its role in EC death and acute lung injury. Here, we show that systemic exposure to the bacterial endotoxin lipopolysaccharide (LPS) causes severe endothelial pyroptosis that is mediated by the inflammatory caspases, human caspases 4/5 in human ECs, or the murine homolog caspase-11 in mice in vivo. In caspase-11–deficient mice, BM transplantation with WT hematopoietic cells did not abrogate endotoxemia-induced acute lung injury, indicating a central role for nonhematopoietic caspase-11 in endotoxemia. Additionally, conditional deletion of caspase-11 in ECs reduced endotoxemia-induced lung edema, neutrophil accumulation, and death. These results establish the requisite role of endothelial pyroptosis in endotoxemic tissue injury and suggest that endothelial inflammatory caspases are an important therapeutic target for acute lung injury.

Authors

Kwong Tai Cheng, Shiqin Xiong, Zhiming Ye, Zhigang Hong, Anke Di, Kit Man Tsang, Xiaopei Gao, Shejuan An, Manish Mittal, Stephen M. Vogel, Edward A. Miao, Jalees Rehman, Asrar B. Malik

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Figure 7

Model of EC caspase-11–dependent mechanism of endothelial pyroptosis and ALI.

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Model of EC caspase-11–dependent mechanism of endothelial pyroptosis and...
LPS enters the endothelial cytoplasma via bacterial microvesicles or by bacterial breaching of the EC plasma membrane. Intracellular LPS then triggers caspase-11–dependent EC pyroptosis and disrupts the endothelial barrier, resulting in pulmonary edema, release of proinflammatory cytokines, fluid protein leakage, and massive influx of leukocytes. PMN, polymorphonuclear leukocytes.

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