Abstract
Intracellular sensing of stress and danger signals initiates inflammatory innate immune responses by triggering inflammasome assembly, caspase-1 activation and pyroptotic cell death as well as the release of interleukin 1β (IL-1β), IL-18 and danger signals. NLRP3 broadly senses infectious patterns and sterile danger signals, resulting in the tightly coordinated and regulated assembly of the NLRP3 inflammasome, but the precise mechanisms are incompletely understood. Here, we identified NLRP11 as an essential component of the NLRP3 inflammasome in human macrophages. NLRP11 interacted with NLRP3 and ASC, and deletion of NLRP11 specifically prevented NLRP3 inflammasome activation by preventing inflammasome assembly, NLRP3 and ASC polymerization, caspase-1 activation, pyroptosis and cytokine release but did not affect other inflammasomes. Restored expression of NLRP11, but not NLRP11 lacking the PYRIN domain (PYD), restored inflammasome activation. NLRP11 was also necessary for inflammasome responses driven by NLRP3 mutations that cause cryopyrin-associated periodic syndrome (CAPS). Because NLRP11 is not expressed in mice, our observations emphasize the specific complexity of inflammasome regulation in humans.
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Main
Germline-encoded, cytosolic pattern recognition receptors sense infectious and sterile stress signals and play a key role in mounting an inflammatory response that eradicates infections and facilitates wound healing and homeostasis. A consequence of intracellular pattern recognition is the activation of caspase-1 within the inflammasome1,2, and NOD-like receptor (NLR) family pyrin domain containing 3 (NLRP3) is a prominent inflammasome sensor of microbial patterns, self-derived danger signals and environmental cues3,4,5. Excessive or mutation-driven NLRP3 responses cause a wide range of inflammatory diseases6, including CAPS, which is caused by gain-of-function mutations in NLRP3 (ref. 7). NLRP3 consists of an N-terminal PYD, a central NAIP [neuronal apoptosis inhibitor protein], C2TA [class 2 transcription activator, of the MHC], HET-E [heterokaryon incompatibility] and TP1 [telomerase-associated protein 1] (NACHT) domain and C-terminal leucine-rich regions (LRRs). The NACHT has ATPase activity and is bound to the LRRs and/or the PYD to maintain an inactive conformation8,9. Once this autoinhibition is released, NLRP3 oligomerizes, and its PYD nucleates polymerization of the adaptor protein ASC, which serves as an amplification mechanism and proceeds in a prion-like, self-perpetuating manner, establishing a temporal-spatial threshold control10,11,12. Polymerized ASC filaments eventually assemble into the characteristic single macromolecular aggregate (speck)13,14. ASC polymerization in turn nucleates caspase-1 polymerization by caspase recruitment domain (CARD)–CARD interactions, resulting in its induced, proximity-mediated activation15. Caspase-1 is ultimately responsible for the induction of pyroptosis through the cleavage of gasdermin D (GSDMD) and subsequent GSDMD pore formation, maturation and release of the proinflammatory cytokines IL-1β and IL-18 and the release of danger signals, including IL-1α, HMGB1 and polymerized ASC particles16,17,18. NLRP3 inflammasome activation proceeds in two steps. Priming includes the upregulation of inflammasome components, including NLRP3 and the substrate IL-1β, a metabolic shift from oxidative phosphorylation to glycolysis and the post-translational modifications of NLRP3, ASC and caspase-1 (refs. 3,4,5). NLRP3 is activated by diverse stimuli3, and K+ efflux has been proposed as the unifying mechanism for NLRP3 activation19. Protein oligomerization is a common mechanism for the activation of innate immune signaling and NLRP3 oligomerization, and particularly the downstream ASC polymerization, are key events in inflammasome activation10,11. Among the NLRP3 regulatory proteins, NEK7 promotes inflammasome activation by bridging two NLRP3 molecules, which is insufficient to induce NLRP3 oligomerization20,21,22,23. GBP5 enables NLRP3–ASC binding in response to soluble, but not crystalline, agonists24, implying that other crucial, yet-unknown cofactors are necessary for NLRP3 oligomerization, inflammasome assembly and activation. To date, the precise mechanism, especially in humans, remains unclear.
Here, we report the identification of NLRP11 as an NLRP3 inflammasome component in human macrophages. NLRP11 bound to ASC and NLRP3 and was required for NLRP3 oligomerization and ASC polymerization. In the absence of NLRP11, NLRP3-mediated caspase-1 activation and release of IL-1β and IL-18 were defective, but activation of AIM2, NLRC4 and NLRP7 inflammasomes was not affected. The NLRP3–ASC–NLRP11 complex only assembled after NLRP3 inflammasome activation, which required NLRP11PYD. NLRP11 was also necessary for the release of IL-1β induced by the CAPS-associated NLRP3 mutant NLRP3R260W, which placed NLRP11 at an essential step in human NLRP3 inflammasome assembly and activation. Our study therefore provides important insights into NLRP3 inflammasome regulation in human macrophages.
Results
NLRP11 is required for NLRP3-mediated cytokine release
ASC polymerization is nucleated by PYD–PYD interactions between the inflammasome sensors and ASC10,11. To identify NLRs that can nucleate ASC polymerization, we transfected NLRs into HEK293ASC-EGFP cells, which stably express diffusely localized ASC-EGFP. Transfection of NLRP3 and NLRP11, but not empty plasmid (Ctrl), similarly promoted the formation of speck-like aggregates, indicating ASC polymerization (Fig. 1a). Next, we generated stable human THP-1 monocytic cells in which NLRP11 expression was knocked down (NLRP11KD) with two different short hairpin RNAs (shRNAs) (Extended Data Fig. 1a) and determined the inflammasome-mediated release of IL-1β in response to the NLRP3 activators, silica, nigericin and cholera toxin B (CTB) by ELISA (Extended Data Fig. 1b). IL-1β release was strongly impaired in both NLRP11KD cells compared to two non-targeting shRNA control (CtrlKD) cells (Extended Data Fig. 1b). IL-6 is secreted independently of inflammasome activation and was not affected (Extended Data Fig. 1b). Reduced IL-1β release was not a result of impaired transcription of IL1B, as indicated by quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction (PCR) (Extended Data Fig. 1c). Moreover, release of IL-1β, but not IL-6, was reduced in primary human macrophages with short interfering RNA (siRNA) silenced NLRP11 (NLRP11siRNA) compared to control siRNA (CtrlsiRNA) (Fig. 1b and Extended Data Fig. 1d), indicating NLRP11 contributed to the efficient activation of the NLRP3 inflammasome. Because NLRP11 knock down and silencing did not completely abolish NLRP11 expression, we used CRISPR-Cas9 to knock out NLRP11 in THP-1 cells. Sequencing of two independent clones (NLRP11KO#1 NLRP11KO#2) indicated a deletion of 4 bp and 172 bp adjacent to the start ATG (Extended Data Fig. 2a), resulting in a frame shift and the introduction of a premature stop codon after amino acid 13 or 17, respectively (Extended Data Fig. 2b). To prevent the expression of various splice forms predicted for NLRP11 (Extended Data Fig. 2c), including the ones using an alternative start site downstream of the PYD, we additionally used CRISPR-Cas9 to target the NACHT/NAD in NLRP11KO#1 and NLRP11KO#2 cells. A 229-bp deletion caused a frame shift (Extended Data Fig. 2d) and premature stop (Extended Data Fig. 2e) in both cell lines leading to complete loss of NLRP11 expression (Fig. 1c), without impacting the expression of NLRP3, ASC or caspase-1 (Extended Data Fig. 2f). THP-1 cells with an shRNA-mediated knockdown of ASC (ASCKD) and THP-1 cells with CRISPR-Cas9-generated deletion of NLRP3 (NLRP3KO), CASP1 (CASP1KO), CASP4 (CASP4KO) and Cas9Ctrl cells were used as controls (Extended Data Fig. 2f,g)13,25. Activation of primed NLRP11KO cells with soluble (nigericin, ATP) and crystalline (silica) NLRP3 activators, as well as K+ efflux, resulted in loss of IL-1β (Fig. 1d,e) and IL-18 (Fig. 1f) release compared to Cas9Ctrl cells. IL-1β and IL-18 release was also lost upon noncanonical activation of the NLRP3 inflammasome following transfection of lipopolysaccharide (LPS) directly into the cytosol of primed NLRP11KO cells, similar to both CASP1KO and CASP4KO cells (Fig. 1g). Primed and nigericin-activated NLRP11KO cells had unaltered secretion of the inflammasome-independent tumor necrosis factor (TNF) (Fig. 1h) and unaltered IL1B transcription (Fig. 1i) compared to Cas9Ctrl cells. In agreement with reports that NLRP11 negatively regulates NF-κB signaling26,27, NLRP11KO cells showed a slight increase in TNF release compared to Cas9Ctrl cells. NLRP11 selectively affected IL-1β release by the NLRP3 inflammasome but not by AIM2, NLRC4 and NLRP7 inflammasomes, activated with poly(dA:dT), flagellin and FSL-1 transfection, respectively (Fig. 1j). NLRP11KD also did not affect IL-1β release induced by transfection with poly(dA:dT), Clostridium difficile toxin B (TcdB) and FSL-1 for AIM2, pyrin and NLRP7 inflammasome activation, respectively (Extended Data Fig. 3). Furthermore, the stable expression of Myc-tagged NLRP11 in THP-1 cells (NLRP11Myc) resulted in increased IL-1β release in response to nigericin compared to Myc control (CtrlMyc) cells, without affecting the release of IL-6 (Fig. 1k). Collectively, these data strongly indicated that NLRP11 was required for NLRP3-mediated IL-1β and IL-18 release in human macrophages.
NLRP11 is required for NLRP3-mediated caspase-1 activation
Next, we directly assessed caspase-1 activity in CtrlKD cells, which showed robust activation of caspase-1 in response to nigericin (Fig. 2a) and poly(dA:dT) (Fig. 2b), whereas NLRP11KD cells showed markedly reduced caspase-1 activation in response to nigericin (Fig. 2a and Extended Data Fig. 4), but not to poly(dA:dT) (Fig. 2b). Nigericin-mediated caspase-1 activation was also reduced in NLRP11siRNA transfected human macrophages compared to CtrlsiRNA transfected cells (Fig. 2c), whereas nigericin-mediated caspase-1 activation was enhanced in NLRP11Myc cells compared to CtrlMyc cells (Fig. 2d). Accordingly, the release of the cleaved, p20 form of active caspase-1 was diminished, and the subsequent proteolytic cleavage of the caspase-1 substrate GSDMD was abolished in primed NLRP11KO cells after nigericin treatment (Fig. 2e), but not after poly(dA:dT) transfection (Fig. 2f). Pyroptosis was also defective in NLRP11KO cells comparable to NLRP3KO cells (Fig. 2g). Detection of ASC and NLRP3 was strongly reduced in the culture SNs of primed and nigericin-activated NLRP11KD cells compared to CtrlKD cells but was maintained in NLRP11KD THP-1 cell lysates (Fig. 2h), suggesting ASC and NLRP3 were retained inside the cells and not released by pyroptosis. Overall, NLRP11 regulated NLRP3-dependent caspase-1 activation, GSDMD cleavage, pyroptosis and the release of inflammasome particles.
NLRP11 is a component of the NLRP3 inflammasome
To determine whether NLRP11 was a part of the NLRP3 inflammasome, we stained untreated or primed and nigericin-activated cells for NLRP11 and found redistribution of diffuse NLRP11 into characteristic ‘speck’-like aggregates, which colocalized with ASC and NLRP3 upon NLRP3 activation (Fig. 3a), suggesting all three proteins formed a complex. When transiently transfected in HEK293 cells, NLRP11, ASC and NLRP3 colocalized to the characteristic ASC aggregates within concentric layers (Fig. 3b). A cross-section view indicated NLRP11 localized between the ASC core and peripheral NLRP3 (Fig. 3b), similar to the spatial organization reported for NLRP3 and NLRC4 (ref. 28). To directly test whether NLRP11 interacted with the NLRP3 inflammasome, we transduced NLRP11-Flag into NLRP11KO cells (NLRP11Flag cells), to allow the specific detection and selection of different levels of NLRP11 expression (Extended Data Fig. 5a). In these cells, NLRP3 copurified NLRP11Flag and ASC following priming and nigericin activation, whereas NLRP3 did not bind to NLRP11Flag in primed cells (Fig. 3c). To test whether NLRP11 interacted with NLRP3, ASC or both, we co-expressed NLRP11 and ASC in HEK293 cells. NLRP11 colocalized with the ASC aggregates, which are induced spontaneously after expression in HEK293 cells, in the absence of NLRP3 (Fig. 3d), suggesting that ASC could be bridging NLRP11 to the NLRP3 inflammasome. To test whether NLRP11 recruited ASC independently of NLRP3, we immunoprecipitated ASC from primed and nigericin-activated NLRP3KO cells expressing NLRP11Flag (Extended Data Fig. 5b) and observed that ASC interacted with NLRP11Flag even in the absence of NLRP3 (Fig. 3e). These data suggest that NLRP11 interacted with ASC independently of NLRP3 in response to nigericin.
ASC recruitment and polymerization requires the NLRP11PYD
Both ASC and NLRP11 contain a PYD, which is known to mediate homotypic interactions. Indeed, the PYD of ASC (ASCPYD) was sufficient to copurify the NLRP11PYD, at levels comparable to the established ASCPYD–NLRP3PYD interaction (Fig. 4a). However, the NLRP11PYD did not copurify the NLRP3PYD (Fig. 4b). To understand the role of the NLRP11PYD, we transduced NLRP11KO cells with NLRP11 lacking the PYD (NLRP11ΔPYD-Flag), selected for comparable expression to full-length NLRP11Flag (Extended Data Fig. 5a) and immunoprecipitated ASC. Although ASC coimmunoprecipitated NLRP11Flag, it did not copurify NLRP11ΔPYD-Flag in primed and nigericin-activated cells (Fig. 4c), suggesting that the NLRP11PYD was required for the NLRP11–ASC interaction. Primed and nigericin-activated NLRP11ΔPYD-Flag cells also failed to secrete IL-1β and IL-18 compared to NLRP11Flag cells, even at increased expression of NLRP11ΔPYD-Flag (Fig. 4d), indicating that the NLRP11PYD was required for NLRP3 inflammasome-mediated cytokine release. Primed and nigericin-activated NLRP11ΔPYD-Flag cells also showed increased secretion of TNF compared to NLRP11Flag cells, comparable to ASCKD cells (Fig. 4d) and reminiscent of the effect observed in NLRP11KO cells (Fig. 1h), suggesting that the NLRP11PYD was also important for this non-NLRP3 inflammasome-mediated effect on NF-κB26,27. ASC polymerization is believed to be nucleated by activated NLRP310,11. However, because NLRP11 interacted with ASC and was necessary for NLRP3 inflammasome activation, we investigated whether NLRP11 contributed to the recruitment and polymerization of ASC. In HEK293ASC-EGFP cells transfected with NLRP3 at levels that promoted only limited ASC polymerization, coexpression of NLRP11 greatly enhanced ASC polymerization (Fig. 4e). Comparable results were obtained by immunoblot assays following nonreversible crosslinking of cell lysates from above cells. Expression of NLRP3 alone promoted the formation of dimeric and oligomeric ASC, whereas coexpression of NLRP3 and NLRP11 synergistically induced strong ASC polymerization (Fig. 4f). Expression of NLRP11 alone did not efficiently nucleate ASC polymerization (Fig. 4f). Primed and nigericin-activated NLRP11KO cells (Fig. 4g) or NLRP11KD cells (Extended Data Fig. 5c) were completely defective in ASC polymerization, similar to NLRP3KO cells, without affecting the expression of total ASC in the cells. Only NLRP11Flag cells, but not NLRP11ΔPYD-Flag cells, promoted nigericin-induced ASC polymerization (Fig. 4h). These results indicated that NLRP3 can nucleate ASC polymerization when overexpressed but that both NLRP3 and NLRP11 are required to induce ASC polymerization in THP-1 cells in a manner dependent on the NLRP11PYD.
NLRP11 is necessary for the oligomerization of human NLRP3
Next, we investigated whether NLRP11 directly contributed to NLRP3 oligomerization. Cotransfection of NLRP11 with ASC and NLRP3EGFP in HEK293 cells enhanced NLRP3EGFP oligomerization (Fig. 5a). Furthermore, NLRP11 cotransfection with dispersed NLRP3EGFP in HEK293 cells promoted NLRP3 oligomerization in a dose-dependent manner, even in the absence of ASC, excluding any feedback from polymerized ASC (Fig. 5b), indicating that NLRP11 was necessary and sufficient to promote NLRP3 oligomerization. Because expression of NLRP11ΔPYD in NLRP11KO cells resulted in defective release of IL-1β and IL-18 (Fig. 4d), suggesting that the NLRP11PYD may also be required for NLRP3 oligomerization, we tested the ability and requirement of individual NLRP11 domains to promote NLRP3 oligomerization. Comparable expression of NLRP11, but not NLRP11ΔPYD, resulted in NLRP3 oligomerization in HEK293 cells (Fig. 5c and Extended Data Fig. 6a). The PYD, NACHT or LRR alone did not support NLRP3 oligomerization (Fig. 5c). NLRP11 lacking the NACHT domain (NLRP11ΔNACHT) or the LRR (NLRP11ΔLRR) was also defective in inducing NLRP3 oligomerization (Fig. 5c), suggesting that intact NLRP11 was required. To further interrogate this mechanism, we stably restored the expression of NLRP11, NLRP11ΔPYD, NLRP11ΔNACHT, NLRP11ΔLRR, NLRP11PYD, NLRP11NACHT and NLRP11LRR in NLRP11KO cells and sorted cells for comparable expression (Extended Data Fig. 6b). Primed and nigericin-activated Cas9Ctrl and NLRP11KO cells expressing NLRP11, but not NLRP11KO cells or NLRP11KO cells expressing any of the other truncated NLRP11 proteins, induced NLRP3 oligomerization, as determined by microscopy and quantification of NLRP3 oligomers using NLRP3KO cells as a specificity control (Fig. 5d,e). Biochemical analysis using blue native gel electrophoresis also demonstrated the nigericin-induced NLRP3 oligomerization in primed Cas9Ctrl cells, which was further enhanced in NLRP11Flag cells (Fig. 5f) but reduced in NLRP11KO cells (Fig. 5g) or NLRP11ΔPYD-Flag cells (Fig. 5h). NLRP3KO cells were used as a specificity control. This analysis also revealed the oligomerization of NLRP11 itself in primed and nigericin-activated NLRP11Flag cells (Fig. 5f). Primed and nigericin-activated NLRP11Flag cells, but not NLRP11KO cells and NLRP11KO cells expressing any truncated NLRP11, secreted IL-1β comparable to Cas9Ctrl cells (Fig. 5i). Collectively, these results demonstrated that intact NLRP11 was necessary for the oligomerization of NLRP3.
NLRP11 promotesNLRP3 inflammasome assembly
Next, we investigated whether NLRP11 interacted with NLRP3 using a proximity ligation assay (PLA). A specific PLA signal was detected in primed and nigericin-activated NLRP11Flag cells, but not in primed cells (Fig. 6a). NLRP3 immunoprecipitation further corroborated the nigericin-dependent interaction of NLRP3 with endogenous NLRP11 in THP-1 cells (Fig. 6b). The reduced expression of NLRP3 and NLRP11 in TCL after prolonged activation (45 min) was likely the result of partially released NLRP3 inflammasome components (Fig. 6b). Accordingly, Flag immunoprecipitation from the SNs of primed and nigericin-activated, but not from primed, NLRP11Flag cells copurified NLRP3 (Fig. 6c), indicating that NLRP11 and NLRP3 were released as a complex by pyroptosis. To determine whether the NLRP3–NLRP11 interaction occurred independently of ASC, we expressed NLRP11Flag in ASCKD cells (Extended Data Fig. 5b) and immunoprecipitated NLRP3. NLRP3 coimmunoprecipitated NLRP11 in primed and nigericin-activated NLRP11Flag cells, and this interaction was also observed in ASCKD cells expressing NLRP11Flag (Fig. 6d), suggesting that NLRP11 interacted with NLRP3 independently of ASC. NLRP3 oligomerization is mediated by the NACHT domain8. In HEK293 cells, the NLRP11NACHT bound directly to the NLRP3NACHT, as demonstrated by coimmunoprecipitation of transiently transfected NLRP11NACHT and NLRP3NACHT domains (Fig. 6e), but the NLRP11NACHT also bound to the NLRP12NACHT and NOD1NACHT domains (Fig. 6f). Binding was still observed under very stringent conditions in RIPA buffer (Extended Data Fig. 7a) and in buffers with up to 800 mM NaCl (Extended Data Fig. 7b), indicating that the NLRP11NACHT bound with high affinity to other NACHT domains. To address whether isolated NACHT domains were more easily accessible for interactions in the absence of intramolecular interactions with the LRR and/or the PYD in the intact protein9,29, we tested the interaction of the NLRP11NACHT with full-length NLRP3 and NLRC4 by transient transfection of HEK293 cells. The NLRP11NACHT coimmunoprecipitated NLRP3 and NLRC4 (Fig. 6g), even though the NLRC4 inflammasome was not affected by NLRP11 (Fig. 1j), confirming previous reports of spontaneous interactions between NLR NACHT domains in HEK293 cells30. The NLRP11NACHT did not interact with pyrin, which lacks a NACHT domain (Fig. 6g). These results suggested that although the NLRP11NACHT can interact with the NLRP3NACHT, additional events may facilitate and determine the specificity of these interactions in macrophages. NEK7 promotes NLRP3 oligomerization and ASC polymerization but cannot mediate NLRP3 activation on its own20,21,22. NEK7 binds to the LRR and NACHT domains of NLRP3 to bridge two adjacent NLRP3 molecules23. NEK7 interacted with NLRP3 in LPS-primed and LPS-primed and nigericin-activated Cas9Ctrl and NLRP11KO cells (Extended Data Fig. 7c), indicating that NLRP11 does not mediate the NEK7–NLRP3 interaction. We did not observe substantial NLRP3 localization to the mitochondria in untreated, primed and primed and nigericin-activated Cas9Ctrl and NLRP11KO cells (Extended Data Fig. 8a), but, as previously described31, NLRP3-activating stimuli caused the disassembly of the trans-Golgi network (TGN), and NLRP3 localization to the dispersed TGN in Cas9Ctrl cells and also in NLRP11KO cells (Extended Data Fig. 8b), indicating that NLRP11 did not affect the intracellular localization of NLRP3. Because the LRR has a key role in assembling mouse NLRP3 oligomers32, we tested whether the NLRP11LRR was involved in the NLRP3–NLRP11 interaction. Transient transfection of HEK293 cells with NLRP11LRR and NLRP3, NLRC4 (which has a LRR) or pyrin (which lacks a LRR) demonstrated that the NLRP11LRR coprecipitated NLRP3, but not NLRC4 or pyrin (Fig. 6h). NLRP3 coimmunoprecipitated NLRP11 in primed and nigericin-activated NLRP11Flag cells, but not in NLRP11ΔPYD-Flag cells (Fig. 6i). To test whether NLRP11 directly controlled the assembly of the NLRP3 inflammasome, we performed a PLA between NLRP3 and caspase-1. A positive PLA signal was detected in primed and nigericin-activated Cas9Ctrl cells, but not in NLRP11KO or ASCKD cells (Fig. 6j). However, expression of NLRP11 cannot compensate for the loss of NLRP3, as NLRP11 overexpression could not induce IL-1β release in primed and nigericin-activated NLRP3KO cells (Fig. 6k). Collectively, these results showed that NLRP11 interacts with NLRP3 independently of ASC through its NACHT and LRRs, but an intact NLRP11, including the NLRP11PYD, was nevertheless required for promoting nigericin-induced interactions between NLRP11 and NLRP3.
NLRP11 is necessary for IL-1β release in CAPS
qPCR analysis indicated that NLRP11 mRNA was induced in primed THP-1 cells, similar to the inducible expression of NLRP3 (Fig. 7a). In primed NLRP11KO cells restored with low or high amounts of NLRP11 protein to mimic the inducible expression of NLRP11-primed cells (Fig. 7b), we observed an NLRP11 concentration-dependent increase in IL-1β secretion in response to nigericin treatment (Fig. 7c), indicating that the activation of the NLRP3 inflammasome was influenced by the amount of NLRP11. In patients with CAPS, myeloid-lineage restricted mutations in NLRP3 and somatic mosaicism6 allow NLRP3 activation in the absence of an activation signal, and priming alone is sufficient to trigger NLRP3 inflammasome-mediated IL-1β release33. The majority of CAPS mutations are localized within the NACHT domain and prevent the autoinhibited conformation of NLRP3 (ref. 34). Accordingly, stable expression of the CAPS mutation NLRP3R260W-EGFP in HEK293 cells resulted in spontaneous oligomerization of NLRP3 (Fig. 7d), whereas wild-type NLRP3EGFP was distributed diffusely throughout the cells (Fig. 7d). Coexpression of NLRP11 in HEK293 cells further increased the aggregation of NLRP3R260W-EGFP (Fig. 7d), indicating that NLRP11 even enhanced the oligomerization of the constitutively active NLRP3R260W. Stable expression of NLRP3R260W also resulted in spontaneous oligomerization of NLRP3R260W in Cas9Ctrl cells when immunostained for NLRP3 (Fig. 7e), but not in NLRP11KO cells (Fig. 7e), whereas stable reexpression of NLRP11Flag in NLRP11KO cells restored NLRP3R260W oligomerization in a dose-dependent manner (Fig. 7e). Priming further increased the number of NLRP3R260W oligomers in Cas9Ctrl cells, but not in NLRP11KO cells (Fig. 7e). IL-1β was already released in primed NLRP11Flag cells, but not in NLRP11KO cells expressing NLRP3R260W (Fig. 7f). These results indicated that NLRP11 was also necessary for facilitating oligomerization and promoting IL-1β release from mutant NLRP3 that causes CAPS. Therefore, NLRP11 is an essential component of the NLRP3 inflammasome (Extended Data Fig. 9).
Discussion
Here, we identified NLRP11 as an essential component of the NLRP3 inflammasome in human macrophages, which was required for caspase-1 activation, release of IL-1β and IL-18 and pyroptosis. NLRP11 bound to ASC through homotypic PYD–PYD interactions, which was required for nigericin-induced ASC polymerization. NLRP11 also independently interacted with NLRP3, which involved the NLRP11LRR and the NLRP11NACHT domains and facilitated NLRP3 oligomerization.
The NLRP11NACHT did not specifically interact with NLRP3 in HEK293 cells. This unspecific affinity of NACHT domains when expressed in HEK293 cells has been reported earlier30. In THP-1 cells, the interaction between NLRP11 and NLRP3 occurred after NLRP3 activation. Therefore, we speculate that in macrophages additional unknown signals may be required to confer specificity to NLRP11NACHT domain interactions. Additional specificity is provided by the NLRP11LRR, which interacted with NLRP3, but not with NLRC4. Taken together, it is very likely that the NLRP11LRR and the NLRP11NACHT domains both contributed to the specific interaction between NLRP3 and NLRP11, reminiscent of the interaction between NLRP3 and NEK7 (ref. 23). Other NACHT domain-mediated NLR hetero-oligomerizations have been described, including NLRC4-NLRP3 (refs. 28,35), NAIP-NLRC4 (refs. 36,37) and Nod2-NLRP1 (ref. 38). NLRC5 also interacts with the NLRP3NACHT to regulate NLRP3 by an unknown mechanism39 but has more recently been linked to major histocompatibility complex class I transactivation40,41. Even though NLRP11 and NLRP3 did not interact through their PYDs, the NLRP11PYD was still crucial for complex formation, because deletion of the PYD prevented NLRP11 recruitment to the NLRP3 inflammasome, NLRP3 oligomerization and NLRP3 inflammasome responses, which required an intact NLRP11 protein. NLRP3 can nucleate ASC polymerization in vitro, and we observed this ability in HEK293 cells, but only if NLRP3 was overexpressed. Increasing the expression of NLRP3 during inflammasome priming contributes to, but is not sufficient for, inflammasome activation3,4,5. Low-level expression of NLRP3 did not nucleate ASC polymerization in HEK293 cells, and even priming-induced elevation of NLRP3 expression was insufficient in THP-1 cells in the absence of NLRP11. NLRP11 was required for NLRP3 inflammasome responses in a dose-dependent manner, but NLRP11 expression was not able to compensate for the loss of NLRP3, indicating that NLRP11 alone could not assemble an inflammasome under these conditions. This mode of activation is unique, because NLRP11 interacted with NLRP3 as well as ASC, and all three were required for NLRP3 inflammasome assembly in THP-1 cells. Other described mechanisms for inflammasome activation require bridging of the NLRP3–ASC interaction by GBP524, or bridging NLRP3 molecules through NACHT-LRR interaction by NEK7 (ref. 23). NLRP11 uniquely combines these mechanisms. NLRP11 was required for the response to all tested soluble and crystalline NLRP3 triggers, supporting its essential role within the NLRP3 inflammasome.
NLRP11 is encoded in humans and absent from mice42, but whether this mechanism is unique to human macrophages will require additional studies. Nevertheless, several other examples exist for increased complexity of inflammasome regulation in humans, including the family of PYD- and CARD-only proteins43. In addition to its function in NLRP3 inflammasome activation, NLRP11 could potentially function as an inflammasome sensor. Arguably, this would require the ability of NLRP11 to nucleate ASC polymerization, and based on our ASCEGFP polymerization assays in HEK293 cells, some NLRP11-mediated ASC polymerization was possible, especially in cells with sufficiently high NLRP11 expression. However, expression of NLRP11 in THP-1 cells failed to polymerize ASC in the absence of activated NLRP3, suggesting that physiological amounts of NLRP3 require the cooperation between NLRP3 and NLRP11, even though macrophages are the cells with the highest expression of NLRP3 (ref. 44).
Little is known about NLRP11, and there are conflicting reports on its role in type I interferon (IFN) or NF-κB signaling26,27,45. NLRP11 causes degradation of TRAF6 to inhibit TLR-mediated NF-κB activation27, and we observed slightly elevated TNF release in NLRP11KO cells. However, NF-κB-dependent IL-6 release and IL1B transcription were not impacted. NLRP11 also binds to DDX3X and inhibits IFN-β and reduces caspase-1 activity in HEK293T cells46. siRNA-mediated silencing of NLRP11 in THP-1 cells slightly elevates Sendai virus-induced IFN-β production and does not affect IL-1β release45, but Sendai virus already completely prevents NLRP3 inflammasome assembly47. Several other NLRs, including NLRP2, NLRP3, NLRP6, NLRP7, NLRP12 and NLRC5, have been linked to inflammasomes, as well as transcriptional responses through regulating NF-κB, mitogen-activated protein kinase and IFN signaling48. Overall, our identification of NLRP11 as an essential adaptor or scaffold for NLRP3 inflammasome assembly and activation provides important insights into the still incompletely understood NLRP3 inflammasome response in humans. NLRP3 is uniquely positioned as a central sensor for infections and cellular stress and has been implicated in a wide range of inflammatory diseases ranging from crystal arthropathies to hereditary autoinflammatory disorders49. NLRP11 may provide an important checkpoint control for NLRP3 inflammasome assembly. Intriguingly, NLRP11 is also necessary for NLRP3 inflammasome responses initiated by CAPS-linked NLRP3 mutations, which may have important clinical implications.
Methods
Reagents and antibodies
The following antibodies were used: custom-raised NLRP11 rabbit polyclonal (AAMRTSNTASRQPL) and mouse monoclonal (recombinant, amino acids 105–624 and WSLKEGREIGVTPA), NLRP11 rabbit polyclonal antibodies (ab105408, Abcam; HPA046402, Millipore-Sigma and NBP1-92186, Novus Biologicals), NLRP3 mouse monoclonal (Cryo-2, Adipogen) and rabbit monoclonal (D4D8T, Cell Signaling Technology), ASC rabbit polyclonal (N-15, Santa Cruz Biotechnology), ASC rabbit polyclonal and mouse monoclonal13,50, caspase-1 rabbit monoclonal (D7F10, Cell Signaling Technology), cleaved caspase-1 rabbit monoclonal (D57A2, Cell Signaling Technology), GSDMD rabbit monoclonal (L60, Cell Signaling Technology), cleaved GSDMD rabbit monoclonal (E7H9G, Cell Signaling Technology), caspase-4 rabbit polyclonal (4450, Cell Signaling Technology), NEK7 rabbit monoclonal (EPR4900, Abcam), TGN46 rabbit monoclonal (JF1-024, Invitrogen, rabbit polyclonal Tom20 (FL-145, Santa Cruz Biotechnology), c-myc mouse monoclonal (9E10, Santa Cruz Biotechnology and 9B11, Cell Signaling Technology), HA mouse monoclonal (F-7, Santa Cruz Biotechnology), mouse monoclonal Flag (M2, Millipore-Sigma), mouse monoclonal tubulin (AA12.1, DSHB), rabbit polyclonal vinculin (AB6039, Millipore-Sigma) antibodies, mouse monoclonal Flag agarose (M2, Millipore-Sigma), mouse monoclonal HA agarose (HA-7, Millipore-Sigma) and HRP-conjugated anti-mouse, anti-rabbit and anti-goat IgG (H + L) (Invitrogen), and goat anti-rabbit and anti-mouse Alexa Fluor 488-, 546- and 647-conjugated antibodies (Invitrogen). Antibodies were also used as directly HRP-conjugates for western blot detection of coimmunoprecipitation experiments.
Cell culture
THP-1 cells (TIB-202, ATCC) were maintained in RPMI 1640 media, supplemented with 10% FBS, 1 mM HEPES buffer, 2 mM glutamine, 1 mM sodium pyruvate, 100 IU ml−1 penicillin, 1 mg ml−1 streptomycin and 0.05 mM 2-mercaptoethanol; used at low passage numbers; and screened routinely for mycoplasma infections (MycoAlert, Lonza). Blood from healthy donors was drawn by the Cedars Sinai Blood Bank after obtaining informed consent under a protocol approved by Cedars Sinai Institutional Review Board and deidentified. Human peripheral blood mononuclear cells were isolated by Ficoll-Hypaque centrifugation (Millipore-Sigma) from healthy donor buffy coats and countercurrent centrifugal elutriation in the presence of 10 μg ml−1 polymyxin B using a JE-6B rotor (Beckman Coulter), as described earlier51. To ensure the purity of peripheral blood mononuclear cells, cells were washed in Hank’s buffered salt solution and resuspended in serum-free RPMI for 1 h, followed by culturing in complete medium supplemented with 20% FBS for 7 days to differentiate peripheral blood macrophages, which were then cultured in medium supplemented with 10% FBS. Isolated and differentiated peripheral blood macrophages were routinely phenotyped to ensure >85% purity, as determined by flow cytometry for CD45 and CD14. HEK293 cells (CRL-3216, ATCC) and Lenti-X HEK293 cells (632180, Takara Bio) were maintained in DMEM containing 10% FBS, 100 IU ml−1 penicillin and 1 mg ml−1 streptomycin. THP-1 cells or primary human macrophages were primed with ultrapure LPS (0111:B4, 200 ng ml−1, Invivogen, 4 h) or Pam3CSK4 (1 μg ml−1, Invivogen, 4 h). Where indicated, cells were also treated with nigericin (5 μM, Invivogen, 10–45 min), CTB (20 μg ml−1, List Biological Laboratories, 6 h), silica (200 μg ml−1, Invivogen, 6 h), TcdB (10 μg ml−1, R&D Systems, 8 h) and ATP (5 mM, Millipore-Sigma, 25 min); cultured in K+-free medium (0.8 mM MgCl2, 1.5 mM CaCl2, 10 mM HEPES, 5 mM glucose and 140 mM NaCl, pH 7.2, 3 h)50; or transfected with flagellin (500 ng ml−1, Invivogen, 4 h), poly(dA:dT) (1 μg ml−1, Invivogen, 4 h) or FSL-1 (0.2 μg ml−1, Invivogen, 4 h) and ultrapure LPS (1 μg ml−1, 4 h) with Lipofectamine 2000 (Invitrogen) or as otherwise indicated.
Gene expression, silencing and knockout
NLRP11 cDNA was amplified by PCR from a human cDNA library cloned into custom pcDNA3 or pLEX expression vectors with Myc, Flag or EGFP tags. NLRP11-TAP was cloned into pHIV-IRES-dTomato (a gift from B. Welm, Addgene, plasmid 21374). Myc-tagged NLRP3R260W was generated previously13 and subcloned into pCIG3 (pCMV-IRES-GFPv3; a gift from F. Goodrum, Addgene, plasmid 78264)52. NLRP11ΔPYD (aa 104–1,033), NLRP11ΔNACHT (Δ aa 104–560), NLRP11ΔLRR (aa 1–560), NLRP11PYD (aa 1–91), NLRP11NACHT (aa 105–624), NLRP11LRR (aa 560–1,033), NLRP3PYD (aa 1–89), NLRP3NACHT (aa 220–389), NOD1NACHT (aa 133–435), NLRP12NACHT (aa 212–528) and NLRC4 were synthesized (IDT, Genewiz) or generated by PCR, cloned into modified pcDNA3 and pHIV-IRES-dTomato expression plasmids. pcDNA3-ASCPYD (aa 1–91), NLRP3 and pyrin have been described earlier51,53,54. All expression constructs were sequence verified. To express or restore NLRP11, NLRP11ΔPYD, NLRP11ΔNACHT, NLRP11ΔLRR, NLRP11PYD, NLRP11NACHT, NLRP11LRR or NLRP3R260W in THP-1 cells, recombinant lentivirus was produced in Lenti-X HEK293 cells by Xfect (Takara Bio) or Lipofectamine 2000 (Invitrogen)-based transfection with modified pLEX (Open Biosystems), pHIV-IRES-dTomato or pCIG3 expression plasmids encoding NLRP3R260W, Myc-NLRP11, NLRP11-Flag, NLRP11ΔPYD-Flag, NLRP11ΔNACHT-Flag, NLRP11ΔLRR-Flag, NLRP11PYD-Flag, NLRP11NACHT-Flag or NLRP11LRR-Flag using empty Myc and Flag vector controls and the viral packaging plasmids psPAX2 (a gift from D. Trono, Addgene, plasmid 12259) and psPAX2 (a gift from D. Trono, Addgene, plasmid 12260), followed by 0.45 μm filtration of virus-containing culture SNs. THP-1 cells were transduced with lentiviral particles in the presence of polybrene (0.45 μg ml−1) and MISSION ExpressMag magnetic beads (Millipore-Sigma). Cells were puromycin selected (1 μg ml−1) 48 h after infection for 2 weeks and sorted by flow cytometry for comparable NLRP3R260W, NLRP11 or truncated NLRP11 expression. NLRP11- and NLRP11ΔPYD-expressing THP-1 cells were further sorted into low- and high-expressing cell populations and expression verified and normalized by immunoblot.
siRNA-mediated silencing of NLRP11 was achieved by electroporation or transfection of pooled NLRP11 siRNA#1 (sc-61142, Santa Cruz Biotechnology) and siRNA#2 (caacauaagauucgaguua; Thermo Scientific) and non-targeting control siRNAs (Santa Cruz Biotechnology and Thermo Scientific). The siRNA for NLRP3 has been described51. 1.5 ×106 THP-1 cells were electroporated with single or pooled siRNA duplexes (120 nM) using the Neon Transfection System (Invitrogen) (voltage, 1,600 V; width, 10 ms; three pulses). Primary human macrophages were transfected using F2/virofect (Targeting Systems) and analyzed 72 h after transfection, as described earlier50,51,55,56.
shRNA-mediated NLRP11KD was achieved via recombinant lentiviral particles produced as described above. Four distinct shRNAs were cloned into pLKO.1 vector (Addgene, plasmid 10878)57. shRNA#1: 5′-ccggcaacactcataaagaccgttactcgagtaacggtctttatgagtgttgttttttg-3′; shRNA#2: 5′-ccggccaactgcatgttggtgaatactcgagtattcaccaacatgcagttggttttttg-3′; shRNA#3: 5′-ccggccgttacaagttcatacacttctcgagaagtgtatgaacttgtaacggttttttg-3′; shRNA#4: 5′-ccgggatgcaagagaattaggactactcgagtagtcctaattctcttgcatcttttttg-3′ (Sigma: TRCN0000128196, TRCN0000149602, TRCN0000146572, TRCN0000128281, respectively). shNLRP11#1 was produced using shRNA#1 and shNLRP11#2 was produced from a virus pool containing all four shRNAs.
NLRP11KO THP-1 cells were generated by CRISPR/Cas9 targeting. Four gRNAs were designed with E-CRISP and CHOPCHOP: gRNA#1: 5′-gagaagcaagatggcagaat-3′; gRNA#2: 5′-cgtgttgccaatctcttatg-3′; gRNA#3: 5′-gtgttgccaatctcttatga-3′; gRNA#4: 5′-tgcgtaaggaagatctttgtagg-3′ using lentiCRISPRv1 (Addgene, plasmid 49535)58 and control lentiCRISPRv1 (Cas9Ctrl). Cells were puromycin selected (1 μg ml−1) and individual cells were sequence analyzed following PCR amplification of the targeting sequence (forward: 5′-tgccaagatcagtcgacaag-3′; reverse: 5′-ggaagtgtgagagggaggtg-3). To eliminate potential expression of any alternative spliced NLRP11, we sequentially targeted the NACHT/NAD by transient electroporation of gRNAs cloned into pSpCas9(BB)-2A-GFP (Addgene, plasmid 48138) or empty vector59 with 4–7 μg endotoxin-free plasmid as described above. gRNA#1: 5′-ggagaaaattcatgctgcaa-3′; gRNA#2: 5′-gcagctgtcgaatgggaaga-3′; gRNA#3: 5′-gctcggcaaaagaatattcg-3′; gRNA#4: 5′-cgatggtagacagcttcaag-3′. Cells were FACS selected and individual cells were sequence analyzed following PCR amplification of the targeting sequence (forward 1: 5′-aatcgcttgaacctgggagg-3′; reverse 1: 5′-agaaacagtcctcctgcagc-3; forward 2: 5′-ccgagtcgccatcttatgct-3′; reverse 2: 5′-aagttcttcatggccccgag-3). gRNA#4 resulted in a premature stop within the NACHT/NAD. CASP4KO THP-1 cells were generated by CRISPR/Cas9 using lentiCRISPRv1 (Addgene, plasmid 49535)58. CASP4 gRNA: 5′-tggtgttttggataacttgg-3′ and Ctrl gRNA: 5′-acggaggctaagcgtcgcaa-3′. NLRP3KO, CASP1KO, and ASCKD cells were described earlier13,25.
Immunoprecipitation
HEK293 cells were transiently transfected with NACHT or PYD constructs in 12-well plates (Lipofectamine 2000, Invitrogen) and analyzed 36 h post transfection. For coimmunoprecipitation of transiently transfected HEK293 cells, cells were washed and lysed in 50 mM HEPES, pH 7.4, 10% Glycerol, 2 mM EDTA, 1% NP-40, supplemented with protease inhibitors using 100 mM NaCl (PYRIN domain), 150 mM NaCl (LRR), 180–800 mM NaCl (NACHT domain), or lysed in RIPA buffer (10 mM Tris-HCl, pH 8.0, 1 mM EDTA, 0.5 mM EGTA, 1% Triton X-100, 0.1% sodium deoxycholate, 0.1% SDS and 140 mM NaCl) supplemented with protease inhibitors (NACHT domain). THP-1 cells were treated as indicated, washed and lysed in 50 mM HEPES, pH 7.4, 50–150 mM NaCl, 10% glycerol, 2 mM EDTA, 0.5% Triton X-100, supplemented with protease inhibitors. For coimmunoprecipitation of culture SNs, conditioned media were adjusted to 0.1% Triton X-100 and supplemented with protease inhibitors and washed with 50 mM NaCl and 0.1% Triton X-100. For IP of endogenous NLRP11, cells were lysed in RIPA buffer (10 mM Tris-HCl, pH 8.0, 1 mM EDTA, 0.5 mM EGTA, 1% Triton X-100, 0.1% sodium deoxycholate, 0.1% SDS and 140 mM NaCl), supplemented with protease and phosphatase inhibitors. Cleared lysates were subjected to IP by incubating with immobilized antibodies or primary antibodies and agarose A/G beads (Santa Cruz Biotechnology) as indicated for 4–16 h at 4 °C. Following extensive washing with lysis buffer, bound proteins in Laemmli sample buffer were separated by SDS/PAGE, transferred to polyvinylidene fluoride membranes, blocked (5% non-fat dry milk, 0.1 M Tris-buffered saline, pH 7.4, 0.1 % Tween 20) and analyzed by immunoblotting as indicated using HRP-conjugated primary or secondary antibodies, ECL detection (SuperSignal West Femto, Thermo Scientific), and digital image acquisition (Thermo iBright and Ultralum Omega 14vR). TCL (5%) were also analyzed where indicated. To re-use membranes, bound antibodies were stripped (0.1 M Glycine, 2% SDS) and washed (0.1 M Tris-buffered saline, pH 7.4, 0.1 % Tween 20).
Immunoblot
TCLs were directly collected in Laemmli buffer and serum-free culture SNs were collected, adjusted to 5% (v/v) ice-cold Trichloroacetic acid (TCA), incubated on ice for 10 min and centrifuged at 21,000×g for 5 min. Pellets were washed twice with ice-cold acetone, briefly air-dried and resuspended in Laemmli buffer, sonicated and analyzed by SDS/PAGE/immunoblot as described above.
Immunofluorescence analysis
THP-1 cells were differentiated using PMA (20 nM, 16 h) on coverslips in 12-well plates (0.5 × 106 cells per well), washed in PBS and rested for 48 h before treatment. HEK293 cells were transiently transfected and then seeded onto coverslips. Cells were fixed (3.7% paraformaldehyde in PBS, 20 min, room temperature), permeabilized (0.5% Triton X-100 in PBS, 10 min, room temperature), blocked (2% BSA, 2% (v/v) goat sera, 0.5% Triton X-100 in PBS, 1 h, room temperature), immunostained overnight with primary antibodies in a humidified chamber, washed and subsequently incubated with Alexa Fluor-conjugated secondary antibodies for 1 h, washed and mounted onto slides with Prolong glass antifade mountant with Nucblue stain (Invitrogen). Images were captured on a Nikon TE2000E2-PFS with ×60 and ×100 oil objectives) with image deconvolution (NIS Elements) and a Zeiss LSM 780.
qPCR
Total RNA was isolated from cells using the E.Z.N.A. total RNA isolation Kit (Omega Bio-tek), incubated with DNAse I and reverse transcribed (Verso cDNA Synthesis Kit, Thermo Scientific). Multiplexed gene expression analysis was performed on an ABI 7300 Real-Time PCR Machine (Applied Biosystems) and Quantstudio 3 (Thermo Scientific) and displayed as relative expression compared to ACTB, using FAM-labeled exon-spanning primers for IL1B (Hs01555410_m1), NLRP11 (Hs00935472_m1), and NLRP3 (Hs00918082_m1) in combination with VIC-labeled primers for ACTB (Hs99999903_m1) (Invitrogen).
ELISA
Cells were seeded into six-well plates (106 cells per well) and treated as indicated, and cleared culture SNs were analyzed for IL-1β (Invitrogen), IL-18 (R&D Systems), IL-6 (BD Biosciences) or TNF (Invitrogen) secretion by ELISA according to the manufacturer’s instructions.
LDH cytotoxicity assay
LDH activity was determined using the LDH Cytotoxicity Detection Kit (Takara Bio) in freshly collected culture SNs. Cytotoxicity was defined as a percentage of released LDH compared to total LDH activity upon cell lysis with 1% Triton X-100.
Caspase-1 activity by FLICA
Primed THP-1 cells were treated with nigericin (5 μM, Invivogen, 45 min) or transfected with poly(dA:dT) (6 ng ml−1, Invivogen, 4 h) and simultaneously incubated with a cell-permeable, biotin labeled irreversible caspase-1 inhibitor substrate (YVAD-CMK, 20 μM) (AnaSpec). Cells were washed twice with cold PBS, fixed with 2% paraformaldehyde (Electron Microscopy Sciences) for 20 min, washed twice with PBS, permeabilized with Cytofix/Cytoperm (BD Biosciences) for 20 min at 4 °C, washed twice with Perm/Wash buffer (BD Biosciences), stained with Alexa Fluor 647-conjuagted Streptavidin (Invitrogen) and washed twice with Perm/Wash buffer. Cells were then washed twice with cold autoMACS Running Buffer (Miltenyi Biotec), resuspended in autoMACS Running Buffer and analyzed on an LSRII (BD Biosciences) and Northern Lights (Cytek) instruments. Data were analyzed with FlowJo v10 software (TreeStar).
ASC polymerization assay (crosslinking of TCLs)
Cells were rinsed with ice-cold PBS and lysed in 20 mM HEPES, pH 7.4, 100 mM NaCl, 1% NP-40, 1 mM sodium orthovanadate, supplemented with protease inhibitors, followed by shearing with a 27-gauge needle. Insoluble pellets were resuspended in PBS supplemented with 2 mM disuccinimidyl suberate (Pierce) and incubated under rotation at room temperature for 30 min. Samples were centrifuged at 2,348×g for 10 min at 4 °C, and crosslinked pellets and cleared cell lysates were resuspended in Laemmli sample buffer and analyzed by immunoblot for ASC.
ASC polymerization and NLRP3 oligomerization by immunofluorescence
HEK293 cells were stably transfected with ASC-EGFP or transiently transfected for NLRP3-EGFP and low-expressing clones were selected by limited dilution to prevent spontaneous aggregation and were grown on poly-lysine-coated coverslips. THP-1 cells were differentiated using PMA (20 nM, 16 h) on coverslips, washed in PBS and rested for 48 h before treatment and stained with mouse monoclonal anti-NLRP3 and secondary anti-mouse Alexa Fluor 488-conjugated antibodies. Cells were processed as described above and ASC and NLRP3 oligomerization was quantified using Fiji and normalized to cell numbers60.
NLRP3 oligomerization by blue native polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis
For blue native polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (Invitrogen), cells were lysed in 50 mM Bis-Tris, pH 7.2, 50 mM NaCl, 10% glycerol, 0.0001% Ponceau, 1% digitonin, 2 mM Na3VO4, 1 mM sodium fluoride and 1 mM PMSF, supplemented with 1× Protease Inhibitor Cocktail (Roche) for 30 min on ice. TCLs were triturated ten times per sample and clarified by centrifugation (16,000×g) for 30 min at 4 °C and analyzed on blue native polyacrylamide gels (Invitrogen), transferred onto polyvinylidene fluoride membranes and analyzed for NLRP3 or NLRP11 (Flag) expression by immunoblot.
PLA
PLA (Duolink PLA, Millipore-Sigma) was performed according to the manufacturer’s instructions. Briefly, THP-1 cells were differentiated using PMA (20 nM, 16 h) on coverslips, washed in PBS and rested for 48 h. Following treatment, cells were washed with PBS, fixed with 3.7% paraformaldehyde for 10 min at room temperature, permeabilized with 0.2% Triton X-100 for 10 min at room temperature and washed with PBS. All incubations were performed in a humidified chamber at 37 °C. Cells were blocked with Duolink Blocking Solution for 1 h, followed by incubation with primary antibodies in Duolink Antibody Diluent for 2 h, incubated with PLUS and MINUS PLA probes, washed (Buffer A) at room temperature, incubated with Ligase for 30 min, washed (Buffer A), incubated with polymerase for 100 min, washed (Buffer B) and mounted on slides using a Duolink In Situ Mounting Medium with DAPI. Cells were analyzed by confocal microscopy (Zeiss, LSM 780).
Statistics and reproducibility
All representative results were independently repeated at least three times with similar results, and n indicates the number of biological replicates. Graphs were prepared in Prism 9 (GraphPad) and data are presented as mean values ± s.d. A standard two-tailed unpaired t-test was used for pairwise statistical analysis of all data. Values of P < 0.05 were considered significant (and marked by an asterisk), and P values are listed in the figure legends.
Reporting Summary
Further information on research design is available in the Nature Research Reporting Summary linked to this article.
Data availability
All data sets are provided as source data, and additional information is available from the corresponding authors upon reasonable request. Source data of intact immunoblots are included for Fig. 1, Fig. 2, Fig. 3, Fig. 4, Fig. 5, Fig. 6, Fig. 7, Extended Data Fig. 1, Extended Data Fig. 2, Extended Data Fig. 5, Extended Data Fig. 6 and Extended Data Fig. 7. Source data of graphs are included for Fig. 1, Fig. 2, Fig. 4, Fig. 5, Fig. 6, Fig. 7, Extended Data Fig. 1 and Extended Data Fig. 3. Source data are provided with this paper.
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Acknowledgements
psPAX2 and pMD.2G were a gift from D. Trono, pSpCas9(BB)-2A-GFP and lentiCRISPRv1 were a gift from F. Zhang, pHIV-IRES-dTomato was a gift from B. Welm and pCMV-IRES-GFPv3 was a gift from F. Goodrum. This work was supported by the National Institutes of Health (grants AI099009 and AR064349 to C.S. and grants AI134030, AI140702, AI165797 and AI120625 to C.S. and A.D.) and the American Heart Association (grant 834502 to J.C.).
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Authors and Affiliations
Contributions
All authors contributed to the design of experiments, performed experiments, analyzed results, prepared preliminary figures and provided critical review of the manuscript. A.D. and C.S. conceived the study, provided overall direction, designed the research and performed the initial experiments, prepared the final figures and wrote the manuscript. A.G. generated the NLRP11KD and NLRP11KO cells; initially introduced NLRP11 in NLRP11KO and NLRP3KO cells; generated the NLRP3R260W and NLRP11Myc cells; quantified initial ASC and NLRP3 aggregates in HEK293 cells; contributed to the FLICA assay; performed some of the microscopy of NLRP11 in HEK293 and THP-1 cells; performed the preliminary PYD coimmunoprecipitation experiments and ASC crosslinking in NLRP11KD and transiently transfected HEK293 cells; contributed to some of the native gels; contributed to the PLA; performed cytokine analysis in NLRP11KD cells, NLRP11siRNA transfected cells, NLRP11-expressing NLRP3KO/NLRP11Flag cells, NLRP11KO/NLRP3R260W cells and some of the NLRP11(lo) and NLRP11(hi) restored cells and in NLRP11Myc cells; and performed the LDH assays and endogenous interaction of NLRP3 and NLRP11. These contributions are reflected as the only contributor to Figs. 1a,b,d,h,k, 2g,h, 3a,b,d, 4a,e–g, 5a,b, 6b,e,k and 7a–d,f, Extended Data Fig. 1a,b, Extended Data Fig. 3 and Extended Data Fig. 5c and shared contributor to Fig. 1j (panel 1), Fig. 2a–d, Fig. 5f,g and Fig. 6a,j. S.D. performed most of the cytokine analysis in NLRP11KO, CASP4KO, CASP1KO and NLRP3KO cells; performed the caspase-1 and GSDMD cleavage analysis, inflammasome complex purification assays in NLRP11KO, NLRP11Flag, NLRP11ΔPYD-Flag, NLRP3KO, ASCKD, NLRP3KO/NLRP11Flag, ASCKD/NLRP11Flag THP-1 cells, the interaction analysis of NLRP3 and NEK7 and ASC crosslinking in NLRP11Flag and NLRP11ΔPYD-Flag cells; and contributed or performed the blue native gels, the cytokine analysis in NLRP11ΔPYD-Flag cells. These contributions are reflected as the only contributor to Figs. 1e, 1f,g, 2e, 3c,e, 4c,d,h, 5h and 6d,i, Extended Data Fig. 2g and Extended Data Fig. 7c and shared contributor to (Figs. 1j (panels 2 and 3) and 5f,g). S.T. generated the THP-1 cell lines restored with varying NLRP11Flag and NLRP11ΔPYD-Flag expression all the NLRP11 single domain and single domain deletion restored cells, the NLRP3KO/NLRP11Flag and ASCKD/NLRP11Flag cells, regenerated the NLRP3R260W cells, sorted cells for comparable expression, performed the expression verification of all THP-1 cell lines except NLRP11Myc cells and CASP4KO cells, performed the NLRP3EGFP oligomerization analysis with all NLRP11 domains in HEK293 cells and THP-1 cells, performed the NLRP3R260W oligomerization in THP-1 cells, performed the cytokine analysis in NLRP11 domain-expressing cells, performed the NLRP11 complex analysis in the culture SN and performed the microscopy for mitochondria and TGN. These contributions are reflected as the only contributor to Figs. 1c, 5c–e,i, 6c, 7e, Extended Data Fig. 2f, Extended Data Fig. 5a,b, Extended Data Fig. 6a,b and Extended Data Fig. 8a,b. J.C. performed most of the binding studies in HEK293 cells with PYD and NACHT domains, determined specificity and performed all the LRR binding assays. These contributions are reflected as the only contributor to Figs. 4b, 6f,g,h and Extended Data Fig. 7a,b. H.N. performed some of the cloning and supported the generation of lentiviruses and stable cells. E.J. contributed to the caspase-1 activation assays. These contributions are reflected as the only contributor to Fig. 2f. H.K. performed the qPCR analysis. These contributions are reflected as the only contributor to Fig. 1i and Extended Data Fig. 1c. L.H.C. established and characterized the CASP1KO and CASP4KO cells, supported the generation of NLRP11KO cells and contributed to the PLAs. These contributions are reflected as shared contributor to Fig. 6a,j. R.A.R. contributed to the FLICA experiments. These contributions are reflected as shared contributor to Fig. 2a–d.
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Extended data
Extended Data Fig. 1 Knockdown of NLRP11 impairs NLRP3-mediated cytokine release.
(a) Immunoblot for NLRP11, NLRP3 and tubulin loading control using TCL of LPS-primed (200 ng/ml, 4 h) stable control (CtrlKD#1 and CtrlKD#2) and NLRP11 knockdown (KD) THP-1 cells (NLRP11KD#1 and NLRP11KD#2). (b) IL-1β and IL-6 ELISA of SN from CtrlKD#1, CtrlKD#2, NLRP11KD#1 and NLRP11KD#2 cells left untreated or primed with LPS (200 ng ml−1, 4 h) and primed+activated with Nig (5 µM, 30 min), CTB (20 µg ml−1, 6 h) and Silica (200 µg ml−1, 6 h); (n = 3, mean ± s.d.); *p = 0.0121; **p = 0.0068, ***p = 0.0101, ****p = 0.0018. (c) Quantitative real-time PCR of IL1B mRNA levels from CtrlKD and NLRP11KD cells left untreated and primed with Pam3CSK4 (1 μg ml−1, 2 h) and presented as fold induction compared to Ctrl cells (n = 3, mean ± s.d.). (d) Immunoblot for NLRP11 and tubulin loading control using TCL of primary human macrophages either not transfected (Ctrl), transfected with CtrlsiRNA or NLRP11siRNA and primed with LPS (200 ng/ml, 4 h).
Extended Data Fig. 2 NLRP11 knockout THP-1 cells.
(a) PCR amplification and sequencing analysis of Cas9Ctrl, NLRP11KO#1 and NLRP11KO#2 THP-1 cells, showing two distinct deletions of 4 and 172 bp. (b) The predicted amino acid sequence and protein length of the resulting NLRP11 proteins are indicated, with the premature stop marked by an asterisk. (c) Domain architecture of the six predicted NLRP11 isoforms. A red arrowhead marks the 2 gRNA targeting sites. (d) PCR amplification and sequence analysis of Cas9Ctrl, NLRP11KO#1 and NLRP11KO#2 cells showing the 229 bp deletion in the NACHT/NAD. (e) The predicted amino acid sequence and protein length of the resulting NLRP11 proteins are indicated, with the premature stop marked by an asterisk. (f,g) Immunoblot for (f) ASC, NLRP3, Caspase-1 and tubulin loading control using TCL from Cas9Ctrl, NLRP11KO#1, NLRP3KO, ASCKD and CASP1KO cells and (g) caspase-4 and tubulin loading control from TCL of Cas9Ctrl and CASP4KO cells.
Extended Data Fig. 3 Knockdown of NLRP11 does not impair IL-1β release by non-NLRP3 inflammasomes.
IL-1β ELISA of SN from CtrlKD and NLRP11KD cells left untreated or primed with LPS (200 ng ml−1, 4 h) and primed+activated with TcdB (10 μg ml−1, 8 h), transfected with poly(dA:dT) (1 μg ml−1, 4 h) or FSL-1 (0.2 μg ml−1, 4 h); (n = 3, mean ± s.d.).
Extended Data Fig. 4 FLICA gating strategy.
Gating strategy used for the FLICA in Fig. 2a-d of CtrlKD#1 cells left untreated, primed with LPS (1 μg ml−1, 1 h) and primed+activated with Nig (5 μM, 45 min). Total cells were gated for singlets, intact cells and for Alexa Fluor (AF) 647+ cells. All samples were gated following this strategy.
Extended Data Fig. 5 NLRP11 silencing impairs ASC polymerization.
(a) Immunoblot for Flag and tubulin loading control using TCL from NLRP11Flag and NLRP11ΔPYD-Flag cells sorted into low (lo) and high (hi) expressing populations. The gap in the blot indicates removal of additional NLRP11-expressing cell populations not included in this study. (b) Immunoblot for Flag, ASC, NLRP3, caspase-1 and tubulin loading control using TCL from NLRP11KO, ASCKD and NLRP3KO cells restored with NLRP11-Flag. (c) ASC crosslinking and immunoblot for ASC using TCL and crosslinked TCL from CtrlKD, NLRP11KD#1, NLRP11KD#2, and NLRP3KO cells left untreated, primed with LPS (200 ng ml−1, 4 h) or primed+activated with Nig (5 μM, 20 min). Arrowheads mark crosslinked ASC polymers.
Extended Data Fig. 6 NLRP11 domain expression for NLRP3 oligomerization.
(a) Immunoblot for Myc, Flag and tubulin loading control using TCL from HEK293NLRP3-EGFP cells transiently cotransfected with empty vector (Ctrl), Myc or Flag-tagged NLRP11 or NLRP11 domains as indicated. (b) Immunoblot for Flag and tubulin loading control using TCL from NLRP11KO THP-1 stably restored with NLRP11-Flag or truncated NLRP11-Flag, as indicated. *marks a cross-reactive protein.
Extended Data Fig. 7 NLRP11 NACHT interactions and NLRP11 does not affect NEK7 recruitment to NLRP3.
(a,b) Immunoprecipitation with immobilized anti-Flag antibodies using TCL from HEK293 cells transiently transfected with Flag-NLRP11NACHT, HA-NLRP3NACHT and HA-NLRP12NACHT, as indicated (a) using RIPA buffer and (b) washed with increasing NaCl concentrations (200 mM, 400 mM, 600 mM and 800 mM) and immunoblot of IP and TCL for HA and Flag. (c) IP with immobilized anti-NEK7 antibodies using TCL from untreated, Pam3CSK4 primed (1 μg ml−1, 2 h) and primed+Nig (5 μM, 10 min) activated Cas9Ctrl, NLRP11KO and NLRP3KO cells and immunoblot of IP and TCL for NLRP3, NEK7 and tubulin loading control.
Extended Data Fig. 8 NLRP11 does not affect TGN localization of NLRP3.
(a,b) Confocal microscopy of PMA-differentiated Cas9Ctrl, NLRP11KO and NLRP3KO cells left untreated, primed with Pam3CSK4 (1 μg ml−1, 2 h) or primed+activated with Nig (5 μM, 20 min) immunostained for (a) Tom20 (green), NLRP3 (red) and DAPI (blue), and (b) TGN46 (green), NLRP3 (red) an d DAPI (blue).
Extended Data Fig. 9 Low and high-expressing NLRP11Flag cells.
Immunoblot for Flag and tubulin loading control using TCL of CtrlFlag, NLRP11Flag(lo) and NLRP11Flag(hi) cells.
Extended Data Fig. 10 An updated model for NLRP3 inflammasome assembly and activation.
Human NLRP11 binds ASC by PYRIN domain (PYD)-PYD interaction and to NLRP3 through its NACHT-LRR region, thereby acting as a scaffold for bridging ASC and NLRP3, which facilitates efficient oligomerization of NLRP3 and consequently, enables caspase-1 activation, IL-1β and IL-18 release and pyroptosis by promoting the polymerization of ASC.
Supplementary information
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Gangopadhyay, A., Devi, S., Tenguria, S. et al. NLRP3 licenses NLRP11 for inflammasome activation in human macrophages. Nat Immunol 23, 892–903 (2022). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41590-022-01220-3
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41590-022-01220-3
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