The gasdermin family represents a type of membrane pore-forming proteins. The gasdermin family is extensively characterized as the executioner of pyroptotic cell death in mammals; recent studies suggest that gasdermin-like pore-forming proteins are also present in bacteria and fungi. In humans, gasdermin D (GSDMD) is activated through inter-domain cleavage by caspase-1 in the canonical inflammasome pathway and cytosolic LPS-activated caspase-4 or caspase-5. The cleavage disrupts the autoinhibition of GSDMD and liberates the N-terminal gasdermin-N domain that binds to membrane lipids and forms pores of an inner diameter of ~18 nm on the membrane, responsible for cell pyroptosis. Here, we describe the methods of determining the phospholipid-binding and pore-forming activity of gasdermins in a robust in vitro system. We also introduce a method of specifically detecting the caspase-cleaved form of GSDMD in pyroptotic cells.
Keywords: Caspase; GSDMD; Gasdermin; Inflammasome; LPS; Liposome; Pore-forming protein; Pyroptosis.
© 2023. The Author(s), under exclusive license to Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature.