Control of the innate immune response by the mevalonate pathway.


Autoria(s): Akula, MK; Shi, M; Jiang, Z; Foster, CE; Miao, D; Li, AS; Zhang, X; Gavin, RM; Forde, SD; Germain, G; Carpenter, S; Rosadini, CV; Gritsman, K; Chae, JJ; Hampton, R; Silverman, N; Gravallese, EM; Kagan, JC; Fitzgerald, KA; Kastner, DL; Golenbock, DT; Bergo, MO; Wang, D
Cobertura

United States

Data(s)

01/08/2016

Resumo

Deficiency in mevalonate kinase (MVK) causes systemic inflammation. However, the molecular mechanisms linking the mevalonate pathway to inflammation remain obscure. Geranylgeranyl pyrophosphate, a non-sterol intermediate of the mevalonate pathway, is the substrate for protein geranylgeranylation, a protein post-translational modification that is catalyzed by protein geranylgeranyl transferase I (GGTase I). Pyrin is an innate immune sensor that forms an active inflammasome in response to bacterial toxins. Mutations in MEFV (encoding human PYRIN) result in autoinflammatory familial Mediterranean fever syndrome. We found that protein geranylgeranylation enabled Toll-like receptor (TLR)-induced activation of phosphatidylinositol-3-OH kinase (PI(3)K) by promoting the interaction between the small GTPase Kras and the PI(3)K catalytic subunit p110δ. Macrophages that were deficient in GGTase I or p110δ exhibited constitutive release of interleukin 1β that was dependent on MEFV but independent of the NLRP3, AIM2 and NLRC4 inflammasomes. In the absence of protein geranylgeranylation, compromised PI(3)K activity allows an unchecked TLR-induced inflammatory responses and constitutive activation of the Pyrin inflammasome.

Formato

922 - 929

Identificador

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27270400

ni.3487

Nat Immunol, 2016, 17 (8), pp. 922 - 929

http://hdl.handle.net/10161/12409

1529-2916

Idioma(s)

ENG

Relação

Nat Immunol

10.1038/ni.3487

Tipo

Journal Article