Abstract

The crosstalk between the host's inflammasome system and the invading virulent/less-virulent viruses determines the outcome of the ensuing inflammatory response. An appropriate activation of inflammasomes triggers antiviral inflammatory responses that clear the virus and heal the inflamed tissue. However, an aberrant activation of inflammasomes can result in a harmful and overwhelming inflammation that could damage the infected tissue. The underlying host's immune mechanisms and the viral virulent factors that impact severe clinical inflammatory disease remain to be fully elucidated. In this study, we used herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1), the causative agent of corneal inflammatory herpetic disease, as a model pathogen to determine: (i) Whether and how the virulence of a virus affects the type and the activation level of the inflammasomes; and (ii) How triggering specific inflammasomes translates into protective or damaging inflammatory response. We showed that, in contrast to the less-virulent HSV-1 strains (RE, F, KOS, and KOS63), corneal infection of B6 mice with the virulent HSV-1 strains (McKrae, 17 or KOS79): (i) Induced simultaneous expression of the NLRP3, NLRP12, and IFI16 inflammasomes; (ii) Increased production of the biologically active Caspase-1 and pro-inflammatory cytokines IL-1β and IL-18; (iii) Heightened recruitment into the inflamed cornea of CD45highLy6C+Ly6G−F4/80+CD11b+CD11c− inflammatory monocytes and CD45highCD11b+F4/80−Ly6GhiLy6Cmed neutrophils; and (iv) This intensified inflammatory response was associated with a severe corneal herpetic disease, irrespective of the level of virus replication in the cornea. Similarly, in vitro infection of human corneal epithelial cells and human monocytic THP-1 cells with the virulent HSV-1 strains triggered a synchronized early expression of NLRP3, NLRP12 and IFI16, 2 h post-infection, associated with formation of single and dense specks of the adapter molecule ASC in HSV(+) cells, but not in the neighboring bystander HSV(−) cells. This was associated with increased cleavages of Caspase-1, IL-1β, and IL-18. These findings suggest a previously unappreciated role of viral virulence in a synchronized early induction of the NLRP3, NLRP12, and IFI16 inflammasomes that lead to a damaging inflammatory response. A potential role of common virus virulent factors that stimulate this harmful inflammatory corneal disease is currently under investigation.

Highlights

  • Inflammasomes are multiprotein complexes that form in the cytosol of the host cells following sensing of invading infectious pathogens [1]

  • The activation of inflammasomes to fighting viral pathogens can sometimes lead to tissue damage and leave casualties in the battlefield

  • Dysregulation or hyper-activation of the inflammasomes by virulent strains of a virus can lead to an exaggeration of inflammatory responses that lead to an exacerbation in the symptoms of viral diseases [5,6,7, 36]

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Summary

Introduction

Inflammasomes are multiprotein complexes that form in the cytosol of the host cells following sensing of invading infectious pathogens [1]. Activation of the inflammasomes system following an early encounter with viral pathogens can mediate a protective or harmful inflammatory response [reviewed in Kanneganti [2]]. The five major canonical inflammasomes (NLRP3, NLRP6, NLRP12, IFI16, and AIM2) include cytoplasmic and nuclear sensor molecules that form a complex with the adaptor protein ASC (apoptosis-associated speck-like protein containing CARD), and the effector protein pro-caspase-1 [reviewed in Kanneganti [2]]. In response to a viral infection, appropriate activation of one or several inflammasomes induces the maturation and secretion of biologically active pro-inflammatory interleukins IL1α, IL-1β, IL-18, and IL-33, which in turn activate inflammatory cell recruitment to the site of viral infection [3, 4]. The underlying cellular and molecular inflammatory mechanisms and the viral genetics that impact clinical inflammation and the severity of herpetic disease remain to be fully elucidated

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