Do bats hold the secret to longer life and inflammatory diseases in humans?

Scientists have discovered a protein in bats that could unlock new strategies to combat ageing and inflammatory diseases in humans.

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An image of a bat mid flight flying towards the camera at night

Summary

Bats are special in their ability to live long and host many emerging viruses. Our previous studies showed that bats have altered inflammasomes, which are central players in aging and infection.

However, the role of inflammasome signaling in combating inflammatory diseases remains poorly understood. Here, we report bat ASC2 as a potent negative regulator of inflammasomes. Bat ASC2 is highly expressed at both the mRNA and protein levels and is highly potent in inhibiting human and mouse inflammasomes.

Transgenic expression of bat ASC2 in mice reduced the severity of peritonitis induced by gout crystals and ASC particles. Bat ASC2 also dampened inflammation induced by multiple viruses and reduced mortality of influenza A virus infection. Importantly, it also suppressed SARS-CoV-2-immune-complex-induced inflammasome activation. Four key residues were identified for the gain of function of bat ASC2.

Our results demonstrate that bat ASC2 is an important negative regulator of inflammasomes with therapeutic potential in inflammatory diseases.

Protein study

The study is published in the journal Cell. The research team included scientists from the Duke-NUS Medical School and Zhejiang University.

Related links

Read the article in the journal Cell 

Article in the Telegraph newspaper