Citation

  • Authors: Sollberger, G., Strittmatter, G. E., Grossi, S., Garstkiewicz, M., Auf dem Keller, U., French, L. E., Beer, H. D.
  • Year: 2015
  • Journal: J Invest Dermatol 135 1395-404
  • Applications: in vitro / siRNA / INTERFERin
  • Cell type: Human primary foreskin keratinocyes

Method

1x10^5 cells were seeded in six-well plates and transfected 24 h later with 10 nM siRNA and 2 µl INTERFERin. Results were analyzed 48 later.

Abstract

Caspase-1 has a crucial role in innate immunity as the protease activates the proinflammatory cytokine prointerleukin(IL)-1beta. Furthermore, caspase-1 induces pyroptosis, a lytic form of cell death that supports inflammation. Activation of caspase-1 occurs in multi-protein complexes termed inflammasomes, which assemble upon sensing of stress signals. In the skin and in skin-derived keratinocytes, UVB irradiation induces inflammasome-dependent IL-1 secretion and sunburn. Here we present evidence that caspase-1 and caspase-4 are required for UVB-induced apoptosis. In UVB-irradiated human primary keratinocytes, apoptosis occurs significantly later than inflammasome activation but depends on caspase-1 activity. However, it proceeds independently of inflammasome activation. By a proteomics approach, we identified the antiapoptotic Bap31 as a putative caspase-1 substrate. Caspase-1-dependent apoptosis is possibly a recent process in evolution as it was not detected in mice. These results suggest a protective role of caspase-1 in keratinocytes during UVB-induced skin cancer development through the induction of apoptosis.

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