Coupling size exclusion chromatography (SEC) with mass spectrometry-based proteomics enables investigating protein complexes, with degradomic profiling providing deeper insights into complex-associated proteolytic processing and retaining of cleavage products. This study aims to map protein complex formation upon inflammasome activation in bone marrow-derived dendritic cells (BMDCs) from gasdermin D-deficient mice, focusing on proteolytic enzymes and truncated proteins in higher molecular weight complexes. Cultured BMDCs were primed with LPS and subsequently treated with nigericin or Val-boroPro (VbP). SEC-fractionated proteins were TMT-labelled and analyzed via liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS). We identified 6862 proteins and 70 802 peptides, including 14 714 semi-tryptic peptides indicating elevated endogenous proteolytic processing. The sequence motif of numerous cleavage sites maps to caspase-like activity. Inflammasome activation was corroborated by elevated levels of apoptosis-associated speck-like protein containing a CARD (ASC) in higher molecular weight (MW) fractions and increased IL-1β levels in low MW fractions upon nigericin or VbP treatment. The majority of truncated cleavage products remained within their corresponding, higher MW protein complexes while caspase-specific cleavage products of Rho-associated protein kinase 1, gelsolin, and AP-2 complex subunit alpha-2 dissociated to lower MW fractions. SEC profiles identified 174 proteases, with cell surface proteases forming high MW complexes, including ADAMs and DPP4 but not MMP14. VbP treatment led to the accumulation of ISG15 in low MW fractions while RNA polymerase II coactivator p15 shifted to higher MW fractions. This study demonstrates that SEC-coupled proteomics and degradomic profiling offer unique insights into protein complex dynamics and proteolytic processes upon inflammasome activation.