Article
Author: Misgeld, Thomas ; Meisinger, Chris ; Brandenburg, Katharina S ; Deepagan, Veerasikku Gopal ; Falquez-Medina, Hugo ; Saller, Benedikt S. ; Saller, Benedikt S ; Ingerl, Isabella L ; Giese, Sebastian ; Wöhrle, Svenja ; Walentek, Peter ; Vince, James E. ; Fischer, Larissa ; Neumann, Konstantin ; Rizzi, Marta ; Häcker, Georg ; Groß, Christina J ; Buescher, Joerg ; Schwemmle, Martin ; Köttgen, Anna ; Baumeister, Ralf ; Koentges, Christoph ; Oelgeklaus, Aline ; Helmstädter, Martin ; Tai, Yi-Heng ; Groß, Christina J. ; Urban, Chiara ; Wu, Gang ; Malli, Roland ; Maurer, Ulrich ; Marada, Adinarayana ; Riedel, Dietmar ; Vince, James E ; Kierdorf, Katrin ; Zimmermann, Julia A ; Rambold, Angelika S. ; Aktories, Philipp ; Reuther, Peter ; Kirschnek, Susanne ; Kerschensteiner, Martin ; Pilic, Johannes ; Mayer, Carolin ; Weber, Alexander N R ; Zimmermann, Julia A. ; Kessler, Susanne ; Gorka, Oliver ; Rambold, Angelika S ; Jakobs, Stefan ; Weber, Alexander N.R. ; Peyronnet, Remi ; Shojaee, Farzaneh ; Lange, Felix ; Edlich, Frank ; Cheng, Yurong ; Ingerl, Isabella L. ; Weber, Damian ; Groß, Olaf ; Kreutz, Clemens ; Brandenburg, Katharina S. ; Ciminski, Kevin ; Crois, Anna ; Dufossez, Clara ; Neuwirt, Emilia ; Mateo-Tortola, Maria ; Heimbucher, Thomas
How mitochondria reconcile roles in functionally divergent cell death pathways of apoptosis and NLRP3 inflammasome-mediated pyroptosis remains elusive, as is their precise role in NLRP3 activation and the evolutionarily conserved physiological function of NLRP3. Here, we have shown that when cells were challenged simultaneously, apoptosis was inhibited and NLRP3 activation prevailed. Apoptosis inhibition by structurally diverse NLRP3 activators, including nigericin, imiquimod, extracellular ATP, particles, and viruses, was not a consequence of inflammasome activation but rather of their effects on mitochondria. NLRP3 activators turned out as oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS) inhibitors, which we found to disrupt mitochondrial cristae architecture, leading to trapping of cytochrome c. Although this effect was alone not sufficient for NLRP3 activation, OXPHOS inhibitors became triggers of NLRP3 when combined with resiquimod or Yoda-1, suggesting that NLRP3 activation requires two simultaneous cellular signals, one of mitochondrial origin. Therefore, OXPHOS and apoptosis inhibition by NLRP3 activators provide stringency in cell death decisions.