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GSDME Protein — Gasdermin E

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protein635 wordssynced 2026-04-02

GSDME Protein — Gasdermin E

Overview

Gasdermin E (GSDME), encoded by the DFNA5 gene, is a pore-forming protein belonging to the gasdermin family of executioners in regulated cell death pathways. GSDME is a 53 kDa protein consisting of an N-terminal pore-forming domain (NTD) and a C-terminal autoinhibitory domain (CTD). Originally characterized as a deafness-associated gene (DFNA5 for autosomal dominant nonsyndromic hearing loss), GSDME has emerged as a critical mediator of pyroptosis, a pro-inflammatory form of programmed cell death, with significant implications for neurodegenerative diseases. Unlike other gasdermins, GSDME is unique in its ability to be activated by caspase-3, linking it to both apoptotic and inflammatory cell death pathways.

Function/Biology

GSDME functions as a molecular switch between apoptosis and pyroptosis. Under normal physiological conditions, GSDME exists in an inactive state with its N-terminal pore-forming domain sequestered by the C-terminal inhibitory domain. Upon cellular stress signals, GSDME undergoes proteolytic cleavage at aspartate 270 by activated caspase-3, liberating the N-terminal fragment. This active N-terminal domain translocates to the plasma membrane and outer mitochondrial membrane, where it oligomerizes to form large aqueous pores (10-14 nanometers in diameter).

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