Abstract

A strict cell death control in the intestinal epithelium is indispensable to maintain barrier integrity and homeostasis. In order to achieve a balance between cell proliferation and cell death, a tight regulation of Caspase-8, which is a key player in controlling apoptosis, is required. Caspase-8 activity is regulated by cellular FLIP proteins. These proteins are expressed in different isoforms (cFLIPlong and cFLIPshort) which determine cell death and survival. Interestingly, several viruses encode FLIP proteins, homologous to cFLIPshort, which are described to regulate Caspase-8 and the host cell death machinery. In the current study a mouse model was generated to show the impact of viral FLIP (vFLIP) from Kaposi’s Sarcoma-associated Herpesvirus (KSHV)/ Human Herpesvirus-8 (HHV-8) on cell death regulation in the gut. Our results demonstrate that expression of vFlip in intestinal epithelial cells suppressed cFlip expression, but protected mice from lethality, tissue damage and excessive apoptotic cell death induced by genetic cFlip deletion. Finally, our model shows that vFlip expression decreases cFlip mediated Caspase-8 activation in intestinal epithelial cells. In conclusion, our data suggests that viral FLIP neutralizes and compensates for cellular FLIP, efficiently counteracting host cell death induction and facilitating further propagation in the host organism.

Highlights

  • A strict regulation of cell death and proliferation is necessary to maintain tissue homeostasis in the gut

  • Results vFlip expression restores the phenotype induced by cFlip deletion Previous results generated by our group showed that mice which express Human Herpesvirus 8 (HHV8)-vFlip in intestinal epithelial cells are characterized by spontaneous intestinal inflammation accompanied by Paneth cell loss, in addition to massive epithelial cell death and constitutive activation of the NFκB pathway [16]

  • We suggested that cFlip expression is actively downregulated during viral HHV8 infection

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Summary

Introduction

A strict regulation of cell death and proliferation is necessary to maintain tissue homeostasis in the gut. Stem cells at the crypt base continuously proliferate, which provides the basis for the enormous self-renewing capacity of the intestinal epithelium. Fully differentiated cells are shed into the intestinal lumen at the villus tip [1, 2]. The process of cell shedding is mediated by highly regulated mechanisms. These include the regulation of tight junction proteins to seal the gap in the epithelial barrier and the induction of detachment-dependent apoptosis of the shed cell [3].

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