May 15, 2026

Gout-Associated Uric Acid Crystals Activate the NALP3 Inflammasome, Martinon et al 2006

Condition Focus: Gout — NLRP3 Inflammasome Discovery

This is the paper that changed our understanding of gout. Published in Nature — the most prestigious scientific journal in the world — Martinon and colleagues at the University of Lausanne identified for the first time that monosodium urate (MSU) crystals, the causative agent of gout, activate a specific molecular complex called the NLRP3 inflammasome to produce the inflammatory cytokines IL-1β and IL-18.

Before this discovery, gout was understood as a crystal deposition disease, but the precise molecular switch that translated crystal presence into the explosive inflammatory response of a gout flare was unknown. Martinon showed that when immune cells (macrophages) encounter MSU crystals, they engulf them. This phagocytosis event triggers the assembly of the NLRP3 inflammasome — a multi-protein complex consisting of NLRP3, ASC adapter protein, and caspase-1 enzyme. Once assembled, caspase-1 cleaves pro-IL-1β and pro-IL-18 into their active forms, which are released from the cell and initiate the massive inflammatory cascade that patients experience as a gout flare.

The study also demonstrated that calcium pyrophosphate (CPPD) crystals activate the same pathway, explaining the similar inflammatory phenotype in pseudogout. NLRP3-deficient mice showed dramatically reduced inflammatory responses to crystal injection, confirming that NLRP3 is not just involved — it is essential.

This paper is in our library because understanding the disease mechanism is the prerequisite for understanding why photobiomodulation works against it. PBM suppresses the exact outputs of this pathway — IL-1β and IL-18 — as demonstrated in subsequent PBM studies included in this library.

G.O.A.T. for Gout Alignment:
The NLRP3 inflammasome pathway identified in this paper is what the G.O.A.T. is designed to counteract. PBM does not block NLRP3 directly, but it suppresses the downstream outputs (IL-1β, IL-18) and modulates the upstream triggers (mitochondrial ROS, NF-κB priming) through mitochondrial photon absorption and cellular signalling. Understanding this mechanism explains why PBM addresses gout inflammation rather than masking pain.

Link to original research here


 

Editor’s note: This landmark paper defines the disease target. For how PBM suppresses the NLRP3 outputs identified here, see Shamloo et al 2023, which demonstrated IL-1β and IL-18 reduction with dual-wavelength PBM. The TXNIP-ROS pathway that primes NLRP3 is detailed in Kim et al 2023. For the finding that even soluble urate activates NLRP3 before crystals form, see Braga et al 2017.

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Key Takeaways

  • Published in Nature: MSU crystals activate the NLRP3 inflammasome — the molecular trigger for gout flares
  • NLRP3 activation produces IL-1β and IL-18, the primary drivers of gout inflammation
  • NLRP3-deficient mice showed dramatically reduced crystal-induced inflammation
  • Same pathway activated by CPPD crystals (pseudogout), explaining shared inflammatory phenotype
  • PBM targets the outputs of this exact pathway — the foundation for photobiomodulation in gout

Study Overview

Study Type:Mechanistic discovery (in vitro + in vivo)
Wavelength(s):N/A (disease mechanism study)
Treatment Protocol:N/A — establishes the disease target for PBM
Sample Size:Mouse macrophage cultures; NLRP3 knockout mice; crystal injection models
Primary Outcome:MSU crystals activate NLRP3 inflammasome → IL-1β and IL-18 production

 

Full Citation

Martinon F, Pétrilli V, Mayor A, Tardivel A, Tschopp J. (2006). Gout-associated uric acid crystals activate the NALP3 inflammasome. Nature, 440(7081), 237–241. View Publication

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