Inflammasomes Flashcards Preview

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Flashcards in Inflammasomes Deck (26)
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1
Q

Outline of what inflammasomes do

A

Inflammasomes trigger capsases that triggers the release of cytokines

2
Q

What are inflammasomes?

A

Wheel-like supramolecular complexes formed in the cytosol

3
Q

What do inflammasomes do?

A

Elicit immune responses in response to PAMPs or DAMPs

4
Q

What are the three parts of an inflammasome?

A

Upstream sensor
Adaptor molecule
Downstream effector

5
Q

What are inflammasomes named after?

A

Their upstream sensors

6
Q

What are the names of common inflammasomes?

A

NLRP1
NLRP2
NLRP3
NLRC4

7
Q

What is an example of an adaptor molecule?

A

ASC

8
Q

What does an adaptor molecule do?

A

Links the upstream sensor to the downstream effector

9
Q

What is binding of the domains governed by?

A

Protein-protein interactions between shared binding domains

10
Q

What is the main goal of an inflammasome?

A

To increase production of IL-1b and IL-18 which mounts an inflammatory response

11
Q

What is the net result of inflammasome assembly?

A

Cleavage of caspases into active forms to increase the production of cytokines

12
Q

What is the main cytokine produced by inflammasomes?

A

IL-1b

13
Q

What do the cytokines accomplish?

A

Pyroptosis

14
Q

What is pyroptosis?

A

Messy cell death

Combination between apoptosis and necrosis

DNA is cleaved and contents of the cell spill out

15
Q

How can pyroptosis be beneficial?

A

Pyroptosis of macrophages for example can lead to the spilling of pro-inflammatory cytokines which induce inflammation in damaged area

16
Q

How can inflammasomes become activated?

A

Via changes in the environment - membrane potential in response to damage to cell membrane causing leakage of potassium and ATP

Oxidative stress

Protease activity

17
Q

How are inflammasomes and crystal diseases related?

A

When macrophages ingest crystals, this activates NLRP3 inflammasomes

Causes IL-1b release

18
Q

What mutations in the inflammasomes has been linked to autoinflammatory diseases?

A

CAPS

Mutation to the NLRP3 gene

Leads to excessive IL-1b secretion

19
Q

How does the CAPS mutation lead to autoinflammation?

A

Mutations lower the threshold of inflammasome activation in the presence of other soluble factors

20
Q

What is the role of inflammasome in development of rheumatoid arthiritis?

A

Not well established

21
Q

What mutations in the inflammasome have been linked to rheumatoid arthiritis?

A

Homozygous carriers of RA have shown loss of function of a component of NLRP3 - CARD8

Polymorphisms in NLRP3 and CARD8 have increased susceptibility to develop RA

22
Q

What proof is there that inflammasomes are related to RA development?

A

Synovial tissue of RA patients have increased IL-1b concentrations

23
Q

What is the A20 gene?

A

RA susceptibility gene

24
Q

How is the A20 gene related to inflammasomes?

A

Absence of A20 show increased IL-1b and NLRP3

25
Q

What is the link between inflammasomes and SLE?

A

Inhibition of NLRP3, caspase-1 and IL-18 have shown to benefit nephritis in murine models of lupus

26
Q

How can we use inflammasomes as therapeutic solutions for diseases?

A

Anti-IL1 therapies have been successful in diabetes type II and juvenile arthritis