A cutting change

A single amino acid mutation within a family of proteins called caspases determines their ability to cleave Gasdermin E, a protein that causes cell death during inflammation.

A pufferfish. Image credit: Brian Yurasits via Unsplash (CC0)

Cell death is essential for an organism to develop and survive as it plays key roles in processes such as embryo development and tissue regeneration. Cell death is also an important form of defence during an infection. A form of programmed cell death known as pyroptosis can be induced in infected cells, which helps to kill the infectious agent as well as alert the immune system to the infection.

Pyroptosis is driven by Gasdermin E, a protein made up of two domains. At one end of the protein, the ‘N-terminal’ domain punctures holes in cell membranes, which can lead to cell death. At the other end, the ‘C-terminal’ domain inhibits the activity of the N-terminal domain. A family of proteins called caspases activate Gasdermin E by cleaving it, which releases the N-terminal domain from the inhibitory C-terminal domain. In humans, two caspases known as CASP3 and CASP7 recognize a specific sequence of amino acids – the building blocks of proteins – in Gasdermin E. However, only CASP3 is able to cleave the protein.

After discovering that, unlike in humans, pufferfish Gasdermin E can be cleaved by both CASP3 and CASP7, Xu et al. wanted to investigate the underlying mechanisms behind this difference. Swapping the domains of human and pufferfish Gasdermin E and creating different versions of CASP7 revealed that the C-terminal domain of Gasdermin E and a single amino acid in CASP7 determine whether cleavage is possible. Interestingly, the key amino acid sequence required for cleavage by CASP7 is present in most vertebrate CASP3 and CASP7 proteins. However, it is absent in most mammalian CASP7.

The findings of Xu et al. suggest that the different activity of human CASP7 and CASP3 is driven by a single amino acid mutation. This change likely played an important role in the process of different CASP proteins evolving to regulate different cellular activities in mammalian cells. This knowledge will be useful for future studies on the evolution and specialization of other closely related proteins.