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Protocols for “MAPL regulates gasdermin-mediated release of mtDNA from lysosomes to drive pyroptotic cell death”

Output Details

Mitochondrial control of cell death is of central importance to disease mechanisms from cancer to neurodegeneration. Mitochondrial anchored protein ligase (MAPL) is an outer mitochondrial membrane small ubiquitin-like modifier ligase that is a key determinant of cell survival, yet how MAPL controls the fate of this process remains unclear. Combining genome-wide functional genetic screening and cell biological approaches, we found that MAPL induces pyroptosis through an inflammatory pathway involving mitochondria and lysosomes. MAPL overexpression promotes mitochondrial DNA trafficking in mitochondrial-derived vesicles to lysosomes, which are permeabilized in a process requiring gasdermin pores. This triggers the release of mtDNA into the cytosol, activating the DNA sensor cGAS, required for cell death. Additionally, multiple Parkinson’s disease-related genes, including VPS35 and LRRK2, also regulate MAPL-induced pyroptosis. Notably, depletion of MAPL, LRRK2 or VPS35 inhibited inflammatory cell death in primary macrophages, placing MAPL and the mitochondria–lysosome pathway at the nexus of immune signalling and cell death. 
Tags
  • Imaging
  • In Vitro
  • Lysosomes
  • Microscopy - optical
  • Mitochondria
  • Other

Meet the Authors

  • User avatar fallback logo

    Mai Nguyen

    External Collaborator

  • User avatar fallback logo

    Jack Collier

    External Collaborator

Aligning Science Across Parkinson's
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