Abstract

The type of cell death triggered by a particular environmental stimulus influences the outcome of infection or inflammatory disease processes. The ability to identify the cell death pathway that is activated in response to infection is essential for understanding the pathogenesis and host response to infection. Activation of the cysteine protease caspase-1 in various inflammasome complexes indicates that cells are undergoing pyroptosis, a regulated, proinflammatory cell death. Inflammasome assembly and caspase activation can be measured by various methods ranging from detection of inflammasome-dependent cell death, cytokine secretion, cleavage of caspase-1, or the formation of "puncta" within the cell that contain inflammasome components, such as caspase-1 or the adapter protein ASC. Here we describe a method for detecting caspase-1 activation on a single cell level in the context of infection by the Gram-negative pathogen Yersinia using immunofluorescence microscopy. We previously used this approach to quantify caspase-1 puncta formation in cells containing Yersinia translocon components (Zwack et al., MBio 6:e02095-14, 2015). This is a modification of methods used previously by Broz et al. (Cell Host Microbe 8:471-483, 2010) and Case and Roy (MBio 2:e00117-11, 2011). By taking a microscopy-based approach that allows us to quantify puncta as well as other cell-biological features of infection (i.e., number of bacteria associated with a particular cell; levels of bacterial effector or translocon proteins in caspase-1 puncta-containing cells; or levels or localization of host cellular proteins), we can better quantify the heterogeneity between cells undergoing pyroptosis and cells that are not under the same infection conditions. These approaches have the potential to generate hypotheses that can enable further mechanistic insight into activation of pyroptosis in response to bacterial infection.

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