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Non-apoptotic caspase-8 is critical for orchestrating exaggerated inflammation during severe SARS-CoV-2 infection

Author

Listed:
  • Stefanie M. Bader

    (Melbourne
    University of Melbourne)

  • Lena Scherer

    (Melbourne
    University of Melbourne)

  • Reet Bhandari

    (Melbourne
    University of Melbourne)

  • Allan J. Motyer

    (Melbourne
    University of Melbourne)

  • James P. Cooney

    (Melbourne
    University of Melbourne)

  • Liana Mackiewicz

    (Melbourne)

  • Merle Dayton

    (Melbourne)

  • Dylan Sheerin

    (Melbourne
    University of Melbourne)

  • David V. L. Romero

    (Melbourne
    University of Melbourne)

  • Jan Schaefer

    (Melbourne
    University of Melbourne)

  • Jiyi Pang

    (Melbourne
    University of Melbourne)

  • Siqi Chen

    (Melbourne
    Nankai University)

  • Kael Schoffer

    (Melbourne)

  • Le Wang

    (Melbourne
    University of Melbourne)

  • Xinyi Jin

    (Melbourne
    University of Melbourne)

  • Daniel Batey

    (Melbourne)

  • Raymond K. H. Yip

    (Melbourne
    University of Melbourne)

  • Ishrat Zaman

    (Melbourne)

  • Pradeep Rajasekhar

    (Melbourne
    University of Melbourne)

  • Matthew J. Gartner

    (Melbourne)

  • Stephen Wilcox

    (Melbourne
    University of Melbourne)

  • Lachlan Whitehead

    (Melbourne
    University of Melbourne)

  • Smitha Rose Georgy

    (Werribee)

  • Ana Maluenda

    (Melbourne)

  • Kathryn C. Davidson

    (Melbourne
    University of Melbourne)

  • Cody C. Allison

    (Melbourne)

  • Rory Bowden

    (Melbourne
    University of Melbourne)

  • Kerstin Brinkmann

    (Melbourne
    University of Melbourne)

  • Marie-Liesse Asselin-Labat

    (Melbourne
    University of Melbourne)

  • Belinda Phipson

    (Melbourne
    University of Melbourne)

  • Maria C. Tanzer

    (Melbourne
    University of Melbourne)

  • Marco J. Herold

    (Melbourne
    University of Melbourne
    Heidelberg
    Heidelberg)

  • Andre L. Samson

    (Melbourne
    University of Melbourne)

  • James E. Vince

    (Melbourne
    University of Melbourne)

  • Andreas Strasser

    (Melbourne
    University of Melbourne)

  • Marc Pellegrini

    (Melbourne
    University of Melbourne
    School of Life Sciences)

  • Marcel Doerflinger

    (Melbourne
    University of Melbourne)

Abstract

Inflammation and excess cytokine release are hallmarks of severe COVID-19. While programmed cell death is known to drive inflammation, its role in SARS-CoV-2 pathogenesis remains unclear. Using gene-targeted murine COVID-19 models, we here find that caspase-8 is critical for cytokine release and inflammation. Loss of caspase-8 reduces disease severity and viral load in mice, and this occurs independently of its apoptotic function. Instead, reduction in SARS-CoV-2 pathology is linked to decreased IL-1β levels and inflammation. Loss of pyroptosis and necroptosis mediators in gene-targeted animals provides no additional benefits in mitigating disease outcomes beyond that conferred by loss of caspase-8. Spatial transcriptomic and proteomic analyses of caspase-8-deficient mice confirm that improved outcomes are due to reduced pro-inflammatory responses, rather than changes in cell death signalling. Elevated expression of caspase-8 and cFLIP in infected lungs, alongside caspase-8-mediated cleavage of N4BP1, a suppressor of NF-kB signalling, indicates a role of this signalling axis in pathological inflammation. Collectively, these findings highlight non-apoptotic functions of caspase-8 as a driver of severe COVID-19 through modulation of inflammation, not through the induction of apoptosis.

Suggested Citation

  • Stefanie M. Bader & Lena Scherer & Reet Bhandari & Allan J. Motyer & James P. Cooney & Liana Mackiewicz & Merle Dayton & Dylan Sheerin & David V. L. Romero & Jan Schaefer & Jiyi Pang & Siqi Chen & Kae, 2025. "Non-apoptotic caspase-8 is critical for orchestrating exaggerated inflammation during severe SARS-CoV-2 infection," Nature Communications, Nature, vol. 16(1), pages 1-21, December.
  • Handle: RePEc:nat:natcom:v:16:y:2025:i:1:d:10.1038_s41467-025-65098-z
    DOI: 10.1038/s41467-025-65098-z
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