Oral Presentation 16th Lorne Infection and Immunity 2026

Caspase-1 self-terminates protease activity to enforce homeostasis and prevent inflammasome-driven diseases (131780)

Sabrina Sofia Burgener 1 , Mark Thomas Milner 1 , Shoumit Dey 2 , Pooranee Morgan 3 , Daniel Blackmore 4 , Emmanuelle Frampton 1 , Gregory Miller 5 , Monalisa Durate de Oliveira 1 , Kirsten Kenney 1 , Rinie Bajracharya 1 , Ulrich Baumgartner 6 , Thomas J.C Collins 3 , Zherui Xiong 1 , Quan Nguyen 1 , Peter J. Meikle 3 , Liviu-Gabriel Bodea 4 , Andrew Clouston 5 , Dave Boucher 7 , Jürgen Götz 4 , Andrew Murphy 3 , Paul Kaye 2 , Kate Schroder 1
  1. Institute for Molecular Bioscience (IMB) and IMB Centre for Inflammation and Disease Research, The University of Queensland, St Lucia, 4072, QLD , Australia
  2. Hull York Medical School and York Biomedical Research Institute, University of York, York, UK.
  3. Baker Heart and Diabetes Institute, 75 Commercial Road, Melbourne, VIC 3004, Australia
  4. Clem Jones Centre for Aging and Dementia Research, Queensland Brain Institute, Faculty of Health, Medicine and Behavioural Sciences, The University of Queensland, St. Lucia, 4072, Australia.
  5. Envoi Specialist Pathologists, Kelvin Grove, 4059, QLD, Australia
  6. School of Biomedical Sciences, Faculty of Health, Medicine and Behavioural Sciences, The University of Queensland, St Lucia 4072, Australia
  7. Department of Biology, York Biomedical Research Institute, University of York , York, UK

Proteases act as sharp scissors that cut protein substrates, modulating protein-protein interactions, creating new bioactive molecules and generating, transducing and amplifying molecular signals. Such critical reactions must be strictly regulated. To date, the molecular mechanisms that silence proteases during diseases are poorly understood.

Inflammasomes are multiprotein signalling hubs that assemble in response to disrupted homeostasis, including metabolic stress and the accumulation of protein aggregates, and provide an activation platform for the cysteine protease caspase-1 (CASP1). Active CASP1 cleaves IL-1 family cytokines (e.g. IL-1b, IL-18) into their bioactive forms and cleaves gasdermin D (GSDMD) to induce cell death. Over the last two decades, most research has defined activation signals for CASP1 and its catalytic function in substrate processing. Little is known about how CASP1 regulates its activity to ensure timely signal inhibition.

Here, we show that autoproteolysis terminates endogenous CASP1 activity in vivo. We generated a knock-in mouse (Casp1.CDL) in which the caspase-1 CARD domain linker (CDL) is mutated to prevent self-cleavage and examined these mice during steady-state and upon major physiological challenges.

In the brain, caspase-1 CDL mutation caused steady-state anxiety-like behaviour, and exacerbated amyloid-induced spatial learning deficits during neurodegeneration. In diet-induced liver disease, caspase-1 CDL mutation accelerated liver steatohepatitis and damage, and importantly, delayed disease resolution during liver healing. Thus, caspase-1 CDL self-cleavage terminates caspase-1 inflammatory programs to maintain steady-state tissue homeostasis, suppress inflammasome-driven diseases, and restore homeostasis after a major challenge to organ function. In revealing when and how CASP1 CDL cleavage occurred is pivotal for our understanding of the molecular mechanism by which this protease is silenced, and we identified caspase-1 as a prime anti-inflammatory drug target