Caspase-1 and related proteases are key players in inflammation and innate immunity. Here, we characterize the evolutionary history of caspase-1 and its close relatives across 19 primates and 21 rodents, focusing on differences that may cause discrepancies between humans and animal studies. While caspase-1 has been retained in all these taxa, other members of the caspase-1 subfamily (caspase-4, caspase-5, caspase-11, and caspase-12 and CARD16, 17, and 18) each have unique evolutionary trajectories. Caspase-4 is found across simian primates, whereas we identified multiple pseudogenization and gene loss events in caspase-5, caspase-11, and the CARDs. Because caspase-4 and caspase-11 are both key players in the noncanonical inflammasome pathway, we expected that these proteins would be likely to evolve rapidly. Instead, we found that these two proteins are largely conserved, whereas caspase-4's close paralog, caspase-5, showed significant indications of positive selection, as did primate caspase-1. Caspase-12 is a nonfunctional pseudogene in humans. We find this extends across most primates, although many rodents and some primates retain an intact, and likely functional, caspase-12. In mouse laboratory lines, we found that 50% of common strains carry nonsynonymous variants that may impact the functions of caspase-11 and caspase-12 and therefore recommend specific strains to be used (and avoided). Finally, unlike rodents, primate caspases have undergone repeated rounds of gene conversion, duplication, and loss leading to a highly dynamic proinflammatory caspase repertoire. Thus, we uncovered many differences in the evolution of primate and rodent proinflammatory caspases and discuss the potential implications of this history for caspase gene functions.
Keywords: caspase-1; caspase-11; caspase-12; caspase-4; caspase-5; innate immunity.
© The Author(s) 2024. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Society for Molecular Biology and Evolution.