Monosodium urate crystals generate nuclease-resistant neutrophil extracellular traps via a distinct molecular pathway
Details
Publication Year 2018-01-24,Volume 200,Issue #5,Page 1802-1816
Journal Title
J Immunol
Publication Type
Journal Article
Abstract
Neutrophil extracellular traps (NETs) and the cell death associated with it (NETosis) have been implicated in numerous diseases. Mechanistic studies of NETosis have typically relied on nonphysiological stimuli, such as PMA. The human disease of gout is caused by monosodium urate (MSU) crystals. We observed that DNA consistent with NETs is present in fluid from acutely inflamed joints of gout patients. NETs also coat the crystals found in uninflamed tophi of chronic gout patients. We developed a quantitative, live cell imaging assay, which measures the key features of NETosis, namely, cell death and chromatin decondensation. We show that MSU and other physiologically relevant crystals induce NETosis through a molecular pathway that is distinct from PMA and Candida hyphae. Crystals interact with lysosomes to induce NADPH oxidase-independent cell death, with postmortem chromatin decondensation mediated by neutrophil elastase. The resulting MSU-induced NETs are enriched for actin and are resistant to serum and DNase degradation. These findings demonstrate a distinct physiological NETosis pathway in response to MSU crystals, which coats MSU crystals in DNA that persists in tissues as gouty tophi.
Publisher
ASI
Research Division(s)
Inflammation; Systems Biology And Personalised Medicine; Cell Signalling And Cell Death
PubMed ID
29367211
Terms of Use/Rights Notice
Refer to copyright notice on published article.


Creation Date: 2018-01-31 03:11:08
Last Modified: 2018-02-27 12:34:55
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