RIPK3-dependent necroptosis is the primary cause of RIPK1-deficient-induced immunodeficiency

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Abstract

RIPK1 (receptor-interacting serine/threonine kinase 1) plays a pivotal role in developing the immune system—patients with homozygous loss-of-function mutations of RIPK1 present with immunodeficiency and intestinal inflammation. Here, we reported that RIPK1-deficient rats represented defects of human patients and were certified as a suitable disease model. Knocking out Ripk3 rather than Caspase-8 nearly completely corrected immunodeficiency disorders, developmental defects, and necroptosis in the thymus of RIPK1-deficient rats. However, inflammatory enteritis was still detected in either Ripk1 / Ripk3 -or Ripk1 / Casp-8 -double deficient rats and only rescued in Ripk1 / Ripk3 / Caspase-8 -triple deficient rats, suggesting RIPK3 mediated necroptosis and Caspase-8 dependent apoptosis contribute in different part in RIPK1-deficient caused the syndrome. Moreover, RIPK1-deficient rat dermal fibroblasts (RDFs) showed sensitive necroptosis and impaired NF-κB activation, also reported in RIPK1-deficient human patients. And pharmacological inhibition of NF-κB activation could sensitize necroptosis of rat cells. Since mutations that damage NF-κB activation could cause immunodeficiency in human patients, it suggested that aberrantly activated necroptosis play a vital role in certain kinds of primary immunodeficiency syndromes and pharmacological inhibition of necroptosis could be a novel therapeutic strategy for those diseases.

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europepmc
last seen: 2026-05-19T01:45:01.086888+00:00