Key Points
aPC protects from myocardial and renal IRIs by restricting mTORC1-mediated activation of the Nlrp3 inflammasome.
Nlrp3 inflammasome suppression by aPC is independent of its anticoagulant effect, depends on PAR-1, and can be mimicked by parmodulin-2.
Abstract
Cytoprotection by activated protein C (aPC) after ischemia-reperfusion injury (IRI) is associated with apoptosis inhibition. However, IRI is hallmarked by inflammation, and hence, cell-death forms disjunct from immunologically silent apoptosis are, in theory, more likely to be relevant. Because pyroptosis (ie, cell death resulting from inflammasome activation) is typically observed in IRI, we speculated that aPC ameliorates IRI by inhibiting inflammasome activation. Here we analyzed the impact of aPC on inflammasome activity in myocardial and renal IRIs. aPC treatment before or after myocardial IRI reduced infarct size and Nlrp3 inflammasome activation in mice. Kinetic in vivo analyses revealed that Nlrp3 inflammasome activation preceded myocardial injury and apoptosis, corroborating a pathogenic role of the Nlrp3 inflammasome. The constitutively active Nlrp3A350V mutation abolished the protective effect of aPC, demonstrating that Nlrp3 suppression is required for aPC-mediated protection from IRI. In vitro aPC inhibited inflammasome activation in macrophages, cardiomyocytes, and cardiac fibroblasts via proteinase-activated receptor 1 (PAR-1) and mammalian target of rapamycin complex 1 (mTORC1) signaling. Accordingly, inhibiting PAR-1 signaling, but not the anticoagulant properties of aPC, abolished the ability of aPC to restrict Nlrp3 inflammasome activity and tissue damage in myocardial IRI. Targeting biased PAR-1 signaling via parmodulin-2 restricted mTORC1 and Nlrp3 inflammasome activation and limited myocardial IRI as efficiently as aPC. The relevance of aPC-mediated Nlrp3 inflammasome suppression after IRI was corroborated in renal IRI, where the tissue protective effect of aPC was likewise dependent on Nlrp3 inflammasome suppression. These studies reveal that aPC protects from IRI by restricting mTORC1-dependent inflammasome activation and that mimicking biased aPC PAR-1 signaling using parmodulins may be a feasible therapeutic approach to combat IRI.
Introduction
Myocardial infarction (MI) is a major cause of death worldwide. Rapid diagnosis and reperfusion improve survival after MI. However, cardiac ischemia-reperfusion injury (IRI) triggers pronounced tissue-disruptive and sterile proinflammatory responses, which compromise outcome.1-3 Induction of interleukin-1β (IL-1β) and IL-18, which are controlled by the Nlrp3 inflammasome, contribute to the tissue-disruptive and proinflammatory responses.4,5 Importantly, Nlrp3 inflammasome inhibition reduces infarct size, attenuates adverse cardiac remodeling, and preserves cardiac function in animal models of MI.6-8
The inflammasome is a signaling platform detecting pathogenic microorganisms and sterile stressors.9 Sensor molecules, which typically contain a NOD-like receptor (Nlr; eg, Nlrp1, Nlrp3, or Nlrc4), detect appropriate stimuli and form a complex with ASC, an adaptor protein encoded by PYCARD. ASC contains a pyrin domain and a caspase activation and recruitment domain (CARD). Via its pyrin domain, ASC interacts with the sensor molecule, and the CARD domain interacts with caspase-1 and initiates caspase-1 self-cleavage. Activated caspase-1 proteolytically activates pro–IL-1β and pro–IL-18, inducing their release via a nonclassical secretion pathway. The activation of the Nlrp3 inflammasome comprises 2 steps: during the priming step, Nlrp3 expression is induced, and during the activation step, the oligomeric inflammasome complex assembles, inducing maturation of IL-1β and IL-18.9
IL-1 receptor antagonist is an endogenous Nlrp3 inflammasome inhibitor during IRI.10,11 However, its induction after myocardial IRI is insufficient to provide full protection, which may reflect higher affinity of IL-1 for the receptor or excess availability of IL-1 receptor.12 Thus, deciphering independent pathways enabling Nlrp3 inflammasome restriction is required to identify suitable therapeutic strategies. Like inflammation, mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR) signaling and coagulation proteases modulate myocardial IRI, but whether these systems are mechanistically linked remains unknown.13,14
An important endogenous inhibitor of inflammation is the coagulation protease–activated protein C (aPC). Given its strong anti-inflammatory properties, human recombinant aPC received approval for sepsis treatment, but it was eventually withdrawn from the market, partially because of failure to replicate efficacy.15,16 Variants of aPC with reduced anticoagulant activity are currently undergoing clinical evaluation for stroke15 (registered at www.clinicaltrials.gov as #NCT02222714). In regard to myocardial IRI, several studies have demonstrated cardioprotection by aPC, which has been linked with apoptosis inhibition.17-22 However, apoptosis is an immunogenically silent cell-death form and is less likely to promote myocardial IRI than other cell-death forms associated with inflammation, such as pyroptosis.23 Considering the close association of myocardial IRI, as well as other forms of IRI, with a strong sterile inflammatory response and the anti-inflammatory effect of aPC, we hypothesized that aPC restricts inflammasome activation in IRI.
Methods
See the supplemental Data, available on the Blood Web site, for additional information.
Mice
Proteinase-activated receptor 2−/− (PAR-2−/−), (PAR-3−/−), Nlrp3A350V LoxP/LoxP, and RosaERTCre mice were obtained from Jackson Laboratory (Bar Harbor, ME). PAR-1−/− and TSC1LoxP/LoxP mice were kindly provided by E.C. (Paris, France) and T.B.H. (Hamburg, Germany), respectively. Wild-type mice (C57BL/6) were obtained from Janvier Labs (Le Genest-Saint-Isle, France). In the current study, we used littermates that had been backcrossed for at least 10 generations on a C57BL/6J background. Only age-matched mice were used throughout the study. All animal experiments were conducted following standards and procedures approved by the local animal care and use committee (Landesverwaltungsamt, Halle, Germany).
In vivo intervention studies
For the myocardial IRI model (left anterior descending artery ligation for 90 minutes followed by 24 hours of reperfusion), mice were injected with phosphate-buffered saline (PBS; control; equal volume intraperitoneally [IP]), aPC (1 mg/kg IP),24 aPC-HAPC1573 complex (aPC was preincubated before injection with HAPC1573 antibody at a 1:1 molar ratio for 10 minutes under gentle agitation to block its anticoagulant activity),24-27 an aPC variant lacking specifically anticoagulant function (3K3A-aPC; 1 mg/kg IP),28,29 the inhibitory PAR-1 pepducin (P1pal-12S; 2.5 mg/kg subcutaneously) followed by aPC (1 mg/kg IP),26,30,31 or parmodulin-2 (5 mg/kg IV)32 30 minutes before myocardial IRI. A subset of mice was treated with PBS (control; equal volume IP) or aPC (1 mg/kg IP) 30 minutes after starting reperfusion. In renal IRI experiments (bilateral renal pedicle occlusion for 30 minutes followed by 24 hours of reperfusion),25 mice were injected with PBS (control; 1 mg/kg IP) or aPC (1 mg/kg IP) 30 minutes before IRI. P1pal-12S and parmodulin-2 have been previously described.30-33 Infarct size was determined as described in the supplemental Methods.
Caspase-1 activity assay
Caspase-1 activity was determined on frozen heart sections using the FLICA Casp-1 assay (Immunochemistry Technologies LCC) as described.34
Cell culture
Statistical analysis
The data are summarized as the mean ± standard error of the mean (SEM). Statistical analyses were performed with the Student t test, the Mann-Whitney U test, or analysis of variance, as appropriate. Post hoc comparisons of analysis of variance were corrected with the method of Tukey. The Kolmogorov-Smirnov test or the D’Agostino-Pearson normality test was used to determine whether the data were consistent with a Gaussian distribution. Prism 5 software (www.graphpad.com) was used for statistical analyses. Statistical significance was accepted at P values <.05.
Results
aPC restricts inflammasome activation after myocardial IRI
To determine whether aPC restricts inflammasome activation in myocardial IRI, we treated mice with aPC (1 mg/kg IP) or PBS (control). After 30 minutes, we induced myocardial ischemia for 90 minutes and analyzed mice after 24 hours of reperfusion (Figure 1A). Congruent with previous reports, aPC markedly reduced infarct size (Figure 1B-C).17-22 Reduction of infarct size by aPC was associated with reduced inflammasome activation within the heart. Cardiac expression of Nlrp3 and cl-Casp1 and cl–IL-1β were increased after myocardial IRI but reduced after aPC pretreatment (Figure 1D-E). Concurrently, in situ caspase-1 activity after myocardial IRI was reduced by aPC (Figure 1F-G). These changes were reflected by plasma cytokine levels. Thus, increased plasma IL-1β and IL-18 levels after myocardial IRI were attenuated by aPC (Figure 1H-I). Additionally, treatment with aPC after myocardial IRI reduced myocardial infarct size and markers of inflammasome activation within the heart and plasma as efficiently as aPC pretreatment (supplemental Figure 1A-G). Thus, aPC efficiently restricts inflammasome activation after myocardial IRI.
Inflammasome activation precedes apoptosis after myocardial IRI
Amelioration of myocardial IRI by aPC has been associated with reduced apoptosis, an immunologically silent form of cell death. However, myocardial IRI is strongly associated with inflammation,37 and hence, we speculated that inflammasome activation might be the leading pathomechanism. To gain insights into the temporal pattern of inflammasome and apoptosis activation after myocardial IRI, we conducted kinetic studies. Hearts isolated at various time points after reperfusion (1-24 hours) were compared with hearts of sham-operated mice. An infarcted area was detected as early as 3 hours after reperfusion (Figure 2A-B). Inflammasome activation within the heart preceded the detectable infarcted area (1-hour time point; cl-Casp1 and cl–IL-1β; Figure 2C-D), whereas markers of apoptosis activation increased at later time points (12-hour time point; cl-Casp3, cl-Casp7, BAX; Figure 2C-D). These data establish that myocardial inflammasome activation occurs early in IRI and precedes the detection of an infarcted area and, importantly, apoptosis activation.
Constitutively active Nlrp3 abolishes the protective effect of aPC in myocardial IRI
The kinetics of inflammasome and apoptosis activation after myocardial IRI suggest that inflammasome activation is the culprit and hence that inflammasome suppression is the primary mechanism underlying the cytoprotective effect of aPC after myocardial IRI. To ascertain whether inflammasome restriction is required for the protective effect of aPC in myocardial IRI, we crossed mice containing an inducible Nlrp3 gain-of-function mutation (Nlrp3A350V LoxP/LoxP [LoxP-Cre recombinase–dependent expression of the constitutively active Nlrp3A350V mutation]) with mice ubiquitously expressing inducible Cre recombinase under the control of the estrogen receptor T2 (Rosa Cre-ERT2), yielding Nlrp3A350V LoxP/LoxPx Rosa Cre-ERT2 mice (hereafter referred to as Nlrp3V-ER mice). Expression of the Nlrp3A350V mutation does not cause heart injury by itself and requires a second stimulus for inflammasome activation.38 Mice were treated for 5 days with tamoxifen (5 mg/kg IP) or PBS (control), which increased Nlrp3 expression in tamoxifen-treated mice (Figure 2E-F). Mice were injected with aPC or PBS (control) 24 hours after the last tamoxifen injection. After another 30 minutes, myocardial ischemia was induced for 90 minutes, and analyses were conducted 24 hours after reperfusion (Figure 2E). In tamoxifen-treated but sham-operated mice, no myocardial infarction was detected (Figure 2G-H), and indices of inflammasome activation remained normal (Figure 2I-L), corroborating that expression of Nlrp3A350V mutation is not sufficient to cause myocardial inflammasome activation. After myocardial IRI, an infarcted area was readily detectable in Nlrp3V-ER mice (Figure 2G-H). Importantly, aPC treatment failed to reduce the infarct size in Nlrp3V-ER mice (Figure 2G-H). Concurrently, aPC failed to reduce protein levels of Nlrp3, cl-Casp1 or cl–IL-1β (Figure 2I-J), or plasma IL-1β and IL-18 levels (Figure 2K-L) in Nlrp3V-ER mice after myocardial IRI. These data establish that in mice with a genetically superimposed bias for inflammasome activation, the protective effect of aPC in myocardial IRI is lost.
aPC prevents inflammasome activation in cardiac resident cells and macrophages in vitro
The role of the inflammasome in innate immune cells like macrophages is firmly established, but recent data have demonstrated functional inflammasome in tissue-resident cells, including cardiomyocytes.6,8 To identify in which cell types aPC prevents inflammasome activation in myocardial IRI, we isolated primary BMDMs, primary neonatal cardiomyocytes, and primary neonatal cardiac fibroblasts. Cells were primed with lipopolysaccharide (LPS; 500 ng/mL), and after 3 hours, cells were exposed to aPC (20 nM) or PBS (control). After 1 hour, cells were exposed to adenosine triphosphate (ATP) or PBS (control) for 3 hours to activate the Nlrp3 inflammasome.39,40 The LPS/ATP-mediated induction of Nlrp3 expression and cl-Casp1 and cl–IL-1β were prevented by aPC in all 3 cell types (Figure 3A-F). Thus, aPC dampens inflammasome activation not only in innate immune cells but also in resident cardiac cells. Although ATP is considered to induce inflammasome activation during myocardial IRI,38 we ascertained the efficacy of aPC in the context of hypoxia reoxygenation (H/R) injury in cardiomyocytes. Exposure of primary neonatal cardiomyocytes to hypoxia (6 hours) followed by reoxygenation (12 hours) without prior LPS stimulation was sufficient for inflammasome activation, increased Nlrp3 expression, and cl-Casp1 and cl–IL-1β (Figure 3G-H). H/R-induced inflammasome activation in primary cardiomyocytes was efficiently prevented by aPC (Figure 3G-H). Taken together, these findings show aPC prevents inflammasome activation both in innate immune cells (macrophages) and in resident cardiac cells (cardiomyocytes, cardiac fibroblasts).
aPC restricts inflammasome by suppressing mTORC1 and HK1
We next investigated the underlying mechanism by which aPC restricts Nlrp3 inflammasome activation. Cardioprotection by aPC after IRI has been linked with 5′ adenosine monophosphate–activated protein kinase (AMPK) activation.21 Furthermore, mTOR complex 1 (mTORC1), which is negatively regulated by AMPK, was recently shown to activate Nlrp3 inflammasome in macrophages via hexokinase 1 (HK1).40 Hence, we speculated that aPC restricts inflammasome activation by restricting mTORC1 signaling in the setting of myocardial IRI. To this end, we determined expression of Raptor (regulatory-associated protein of mTOR) and HK1 as well as total and phosphorylated ribosomal p70-S6 kinase (p70S6K) in BMDMs, neonatal cardiac fibroblasts, and neonatal cardiomyocytes. Expression of Raptor and HK1 and phosphorylation of p70S6K were enhanced in LPS-primed ATP-stimulated BMDMs and neonatal cardiac fibroblasts (Figure 4A-B; supplemental Figure 2A-B),40 as well as in neonatal cardiomyocytes subjected to H/R (Figure 4C; supplemental Figure 2C). Treatment with aPC normalized expression of Raptor and HK1 and p70S6K phosphorylation levels in LPS-primed and ATP-stimulated cells or in H/R-injured primary cardiomyocytes (Figure 4A-C; supplemental Figure 2A-C). To corroborate the in vivo relevance of these findings, we analyzed heart tissue of mice with myocardial IRI. Treatment with aPC markedly reduced expression of Raptor and HK1 as well as phosphorylation of p70S6K in comparison with PBS-treated mice (control; Figure 4D-E). These data suggest that aPC restricts inflammasome activation by limiting mTORC1 activation.
To determine the mechanistic relevance of aPC-dependent mTORC1 regulation for inflammasome restriction, we used cells lacking TSC1. TSC1 is a pivotal inhibitor of mTORC1, and its deficiency causes constitutive mTORC1 activation.41 BMDMs were isolated from mice with inducible TSC1 deficiency, and TSC1 expression was inhibited by transient expression with Cre recombinase ex vivo41 (Figure 4F; control cells transiently expressed GFP). In TSC1-deficient BMDMs, aPC failed to inhibit expression of Raptor and HK1 and phosphorylation of p70S6K (Figure 4G-H), and importantly, aPC-mediated Nlrp3 inflammasome restriction was abolished (Figure 4I-J). These results demonstrate that constitutive activation of mTORC1 signaling abolishes the inhibitory effect of aPC on inflammasome activation, establishing that aPC limits inflammasome activation by restricting mTORC1 activation.
aPC restricts inflammasome activation via PAR-1
To gain additional mechanistic insights and identify potential therapeutic targets, we ascertained the receptors involved. First, we analyzed expression of PARs and endothelial PC receptor (EPCR) in the different cell types employed in our study. Expression of PAR-1, PAR-2, PAR-3, PAR-4, and EPCR was readily detectable in these cells (supplemental Figure 3A). To determine the functional relevance of these receptors, we isolated BMDMs, neonatal cardiomyocytes, and cardiac fibroblasts from PAR-1−/−, PAR-2−/−, or PAR-3−/− mice, and PAR-4 or EPCR function was blocked in wild-type cells using inhibitory antibodies.25,26 PAR-1 deficiency efficiently abolished Nlrp3 inflammasome suppression by aPC, whereas PAR-2 or PAR-3 deficiency and PAR-4 or EPCR blockage had no effect in any cell type studied (Figure 5A-C; supplemental Figure 3B-G). These in vitro results suggest that aPC restricts the inflammasome activation via PAR-1 in various cell types relevant for myocardial IRI.
To corroborate the in vivo relevance of the in vitro receptor studies, we employed the myocardial IRI model. Before myocardial IRI, mice were exposed to PBS (control), aPC alone, the aPC-HAPC1573 complex (the antibody HAPC1573 specifically blocks the anticoagulant function of aPC),24-27 or an aPC variant specifically lacking anticoagulant function (3K3A-aPC),28,29 or they were first treated with an inhibitory PAR-1 pepducin (P1pal-12S)26,30,31 followed by aPC treatment. Treatment with 3K3A-aPC or preincubation of aPC with the HAPC1573 antibody did not abolish the protective effect of aPC, as reflected by reduced infarct size (Figure 5D-F), reduced myocardial Nlrp3 expression and reduced cl-Casp1 and cl–IL-1β (Figure 5G; supplemental Figure 4A), reduced myocardial caspase-1 activity (FLICA-Casp1 assay; Figure 5H; supplemental Figure 4B), and reduced plasma IL-1β and IL-18 levels (Figure 5I-J). However, after inhibition of PAR-1, all these protective effects of aPC were lost (Figure 5D-J), verifying a pivotal function of PAR-1 in the cardioprotective effect of aPC in regard to myocardial IRI and inflammasome suppression.
PAR-1–specific parmodulin ameliorates inflammasome activation in myocardial IRI
Considering that aPC predominately requires PAR-1 for inflammasome restriction after myocardial IRI, we speculated that targeting PAR-1 would be sufficient to mimic the effect of aPC. However, PAR-1 has pleiotropic effects and, depending on the activator and coreceptors involved, can convey via biased signaling cell-damaging or cell-protective effects.15,42 Recently, structural biochemistry–created compounds, parmodulins, were shown to block only specific aspects of biased PAR signaling.32 We used parmodulin-2, which blocks cytodisruptive, but not cytoprotective, PAR-1 signaling32 and evaluated its anti-inflammatory and cytoprotective effects in myocardial IRI. Treatment of mice with parmodulin-2 (5 mg/kg; Figure 6A) before myocardial IRI was as sufficient as that with aPC, reducing the infarct size (Figure 6B-C), cardiac expression of inflammasome regulators (Nlrp3, cl-Casp1, cl-IL1β; Figure 6D-E), and plasma IL-1β levels (Figure 6F). Furthermore, parmodulin-2 efficiently reduced expression of Raptor and HK1 and phosphorylation of p70S6K (Figure 6G-H). Thus, mimicking biased aPC signaling via PAR-1 using parmodulins is sufficient to limit inflammasome activity and convey cardioprotection in myocardial IRI.
aPC protects against renal IRI by limiting Nlrp3 inflammasome activity
Considering recent data showing that inflammasome activation contributes to IRI in other tissues, including the kidney,43,44 we speculated that inflammasome suppression by aPC may have implications beyond myocardial IRI. To this end, we induced renal IRI following an established protocol.25 Mice were pretreated with aPC (1 mg/kg bodyweight IP) or PBS 30 minutes before renal IRI (bilateral renal pedicle occlusion, 30 minutes). After 24 hours, we determined indices of renal failure and inflammasome activation (Figure 7A). As expected, BUN, creatinine, tubular injury, and expression of KIM-1 (kidney-injury-molecule 1) were induced in control mice as compared with sham-operated mice (Figure 7B-C; supplemental Figure 5A-C). Likewise, renal expression of Nlrp3 and cl-Casp1 and cl–IL-1β as well as the presence of cl-Casp1 within renal medullary tubular cells were markedly reduced by aPC treatment (Figure 7D-G). In parallel, aPC treatment decreased plasma cytokines (IL-1β, IL-18; Figure 7H-I). Importantly, Nlrp3 expression, which conveys renal injury at least in part independent of the canonical inflammasome (caspase-1, IL-1β, IL-18), was not different in aPC-treated and sham-operated mice, suggesting that aPC treatment efficiently blocks canonical and noncanonical effects of Nlrp3. Congruent with results from myocardial IRI (Figure 2), aPC failed to reduce inflammasome activation or protect against renal IRI in Nlrp3V-ER mice (Figure 7J-P; supplemental Figure 6A-C). Thus, as in the heart, renal inflammasome restriction by aPC depends on Nlrp3 suppression.
Discussion
Here we establish that aPC is an endogenous negative regulator of inflammasome activation after IRI, uncovering a new anti-inflammatory mechanism of aPC. We used 2 independent models, myocardial and renal IRIs, to demonstrate that aPC restricts Nlrp3 expression and activation of caspase-1 and IL-1β. aPC treatment after onset of IRI efficiently restricts Nlrp3 inflammasome activation and is sufficient for cytoprotection, which is congruent with an improved outcome after inflammasome inhibition after myocardial IRI.4 In addition, we demonstrate that inflammasome restriction by aPC is independent of its anticoagulant properties but depends on signaling via PAR-1. Importantly, a biased agonist of PAR-1 (parmodulin-2) mimics inflammasome suppression and cytoprotection after myocardial IRI. Thus, we propose that biased agonists mimicking aPC signaling may be a new therapeutic approach in IRI.
Inflammasome activation after IRI occurs in various organs other than the heart and the kidney, including the brain and the liver.45 In these organs, aPC likewise conveys cytoprotection after IRI,15 suggesting that limiting inflammasome activation by aPC may be relevant not only in the heart and kidney (as shown here), but also in other organs. Of note, the 3K3A aPC variant has pronounced neuroprotective effects in animal models of cerebral IRI and is undergoing clinical trials in patients experiencing stroke (registered at www.clinicaltrials.gov as #NCT02222714).46 Because Nlrp3 inflammasome inhibition ameliorates experimental cerebral IRI, it is conceivable that aPC restricts Nlrp3 inflammasome activation in cerebral IRI, but this remains to be shown.
Nlrp3 overexpression itself is not sufficient to cause myocardial dysfunction38 (as shown in the current study), corroborating that both the priming and activation steps are required for inflammasome activation after IRI.38,47 Importantly, by restricting Nlrp3 expression and caspase-1 and IL-1β activation, aPC seems to target both inflammasome activation steps. Because the priming step of inflammasome activation is largely mediated by NF-κB, and because aPC inhibits NF-κB activity, the proposed function of aPC in restricting inflammasome priming is plausible.48,49 Considering the results obtained here using aPC and parmodulin-2 or recent studies using small-compound Nlrp3 inhibitors,50 targeting both steps of Nlrp3 inflammasome seems to be therapeutically feasible. On the basis of these observations, we propose that simultaneously restricting the priming (induction of Nlrp3 expression) and activation (formation of the inflammasome complex) steps may be superior to inhibition of IL-1 receptor signaling or caspases.5,51,52
Both canonical (IL-1β, IL-18) and noncanonical (Nlrp3 or caspase-1) inflammasome-dependent effects cause tissue damage after IRI.6-8,53 Thus, in myocardial fibroblasts, Nlrp3 induces mitochondrial ROS and Smad signaling directly through its NACHT domain.53 Likewise, in renal IRI, Nlrp3 conveys tissue damage independent of ASC and cytokine production.54 Whether aPC regulates the canonical Nlrp3 activation pathway, the noncanonical Nlrp3 activation via caspase-11, or both needs to be further evaluated in future studies.
The current results suggest that inflammasome activation and associated cell death (pyroptosis) are mechanistically more relevant than apoptosis in IRI. A role of apoptosis, an immunologically silent cell-death form, in myocardial IRI has been repeatedly proposed, but these studies have typically used terminal deoxynucleotidyltransferase-mediated dUTP nick end labeling assay, which is not specific for apoptosis and additionally detects pyroptosis and other cell-death forms.4,5,17,19 Our in vivo kinetic studies demonstrate that inflammasome activation precedes apoptosis (Figure 2). Additionally, Nlrp3 deficiency is protective in myocardial IRI.6 Inflammasome activation and pyroptosis in tissue-resident cells after IRI may generate a proinflammatory micromilieu leading to the recruitment of professional immune cells. This may trigger a vicious cycle promoting tissue damage.47,55,56 Targeting the Nlrp3 inflammasome or caspase-1 may inhibit very early tissue-disruptive events and thus may be superior to other approaches limiting inflammation associated with IRI. However, the current study does not exclude the occurrence or relevance of apoptosis in IRI. Indeed, the induction of apoptosis at later stages after IRI may reflect a protective mechanism, eliminating damaged cells without simultaneously inducing an inflammatory response.
What might be the mechanisms underlying aPC-mediated inflammasome inhibition? Here we show that inflammasome inhibition by aPC depends on mTORC1 inhibition. mTORC1 activation and induction of HK1 expression and glycolysis constitute a mechanism of Nlrp3, but not of Nlrp1 or Nlrc4, activation in macrophages.57 Likewise, we observed inhibition of mTORC1 and HK1 in LPS- and ATP-challenged macrophages and cardiac fibroblasts by aPC. In addition, aPC inhibited mTORC1 and HK1 in hypoxia/reoxygenation-challenged cardiomyocytes as well as in the heart after myocardial IRI. Inhibition of mTORC1 by aPC is congruent with AMPK activation (an inhibitor of mTORC1 signaling) by aPC after myocardial infarction.21 mTORC1 activation in IRI has frequently been observed,58,59 corroborating a mechanistic relevance of mTORC1 inhibition by aPC. We acknowledge that the role of mTOR signaling in myocardial IRI is complex and depends on its temporal activation pattern, the cell type, the extent of mTOR activity, and the involvement of mTORC1 vs mTORC2.14,41,60 The ability of TSC1 deficiency to abolish aPC-mediated mTORC1 inhibition indicates that aPC regulates the mTORC1 complex.60,61 However, considering the multifaceted interactions of TSC1/TSC2, mTORC1, and mTORC2, the precise mechanism needs to be evaluated in future studies.
We and others have demonstrated that aPC restricts mitochondrial ROS,24,62 a known inducer of Nlrp3 inflammasome activation.45 Intriguingly, mTORC1 regulates mitochondrial quality and ROS,63 suggesting that inhibition of mTORC1 and mitochondrial ROS by aPC may be mechanistically linked. Because the regulation of mitochondrial ROS and mTORC1 is mutual,64 additional studies are required to decipher the exact mechanism through which aPC regulates mTORC1 and mitochondrial ROS.
Although it provides new insights into the cytoprotective effects of aPC, the current study also raises questions. Thus, although parmodulin-2 demonstrated efficacy in the study, it currently remains unknown whether mimicking biased signaling via PAR-1 is sufficient to copy the versatile cytoprotective effects of aPC. Considering that parmodulin-2 targets Gαq signaling, we suspect that aPC–PAR-1–Gαq signaling conveys aPC-mediated inflammasome suppression.32 Furthermore, various receptors complement aPC signaling via PAR-1 in cell- and context-specific fashions.26,65,66 The coreceptors required for aPC PAR-1–mediated inflammasome suppression remain unknown. Deciphering the specific coreceptors and signaling pathways involved may allow further optimization of a molecular targeted therapy to inhibit inflammasome activation after IRI.
Additionally, the long-term outcome after interventions with aPC in the setting of myocardial IRI remains to be evaluated. Several groups have shown that inflammasome inhibition improves cardiac remodeling and function at later time points.4,5,67 Because aPC ameliorates angiotensin II–triggered myocardial remodeling,22 an improved outcome after aPC-mediated inflammasome restriction seems conceivable, but this remains to be shown.
We demonstrate inflammasome suppression by aPC in various cell types relevant in myocardial IRI. Whether inflammasome suppression in a particular cell type is more important than in others in the context of IRI remains to be shown. Intriguingly, the proposed initiation of a vicious cycle by inflammasome activation in tissue-resident cells, which then promotes the recruitment and activation of inflammatory cells, implies that it may be sufficient to inhibit inflammasome activation specifically in ischemic organs. This may allow tissue protection without compromising the function of innate immune cells, which may constitute an advantage in organ transplantation or in patients in an intensive care unit setting.
The online version of this article contains a data supplement.
The publication costs of this article were defrayed in part by page charge payment. Therefore, and solely to indicate this fact, this article is hereby marked “advertisement” in accordance with 18 USC section 1734.
Acknowledgments
The authors thank Johannes Lauf, Kathrin Deneser, Julia Judin, Juliane Friedrich, René Rudat, Rumiya Makarova, Xiao Xu, and Jose A. Fernandez for excellent technical support.
This work was supported by grants IS-67/5-3, IS-67/8-1, IS-67/11-1, and CRC854/B26 (B.I.), SH 849/1-2 (K.S.), and CRC1140, CRC 992, and HU 1016/8-1 (T.B.H.) from the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft; the Stiftung Pathobiochemie und Molekulare Diagnostik (K.S.); grants UM1-HL120877 (C.T.E.) and HL052246 (J.H.G.) from the National Institutes of Health (NIH), National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute; grant 01GM1518C from the German Federal Ministry of Education and Research (T.B.H.); grant 616891 from the European Research Council (T.B.H.); the Biomarker Enterprise to Attack Diabetic Kidney Disease, Horizon 2020 Innovative Medicine Initiative 2 Consortium (T.B.H.); grant 1R15HL127636 from the NIH, National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (C.D.); and German Academic Exchange Service scholarships (M.M.A.-D., A.E.).
Authorship
Contribution: S.N. performed and interpreted experiments; I.G. performed histological analyses; M.M.A.-D., S.K., A.E., and S.R. performed mouse experiments; S.G., J.M., and F.B. assisted in primary cell isolation work; T.B.H., C.D., E.C., C.T.E., and J.H.G. provided reagents and assisted in manuscript preparation; R.C.B.-D. assisted in manuscript preparation; and K.S. and B.I. conceptually designed and interpreted the experimental work and prepared the manuscript.
Conflict-of-interest disclosure: C.D. is an inventor on a patent (WO2012/040636) describing parmodulin-2 (ML161). The remaining authors declare no competing financial interests.
Correspondence: Khurrum Shahzad, Department of Clinical Chemistry and Pathobiochemistry, Ottovon-Guericke-University Magdeburg, Leipziger Str 44, 39120 Magdeburg, Germany; e-mail: khurrum.shahzad@med.ovgu.de; and Berend Isermann, Department of Clinical Chemistry and Pathobiochemistry, Otto-von-Guericke-University Magdeburg, Leipziger Str 44, 39120 Magdeburg, Germany; e-mail: berend.isermann@med.ovgu.de.
References
Author notes
B.I. and K.S. contributed equally as last authors.
This feature is available to Subscribers Only
Sign In or Create an Account Close Modal