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Site-specific phosphorylation and microtubule dynamics control Pyrin inflammasome activation
by
Liu, Wang
, Shao, Feng
, Wang, Yupeng
, Yang, Jieling
, Gao, Wenqing
in
14-3-3 Proteins - metabolism
/ Animals
/ Bacterial diseases
/ Bacterial Toxins - pharmacology
/ Biological Sciences
/ Bone marrow
/ Cells
/ Enterotoxins - pharmacology
/ HEK293 Cells
/ Humans
/ Immunology and Inflammation
/ Inflammasomes - physiology
/ Mice
/ Mice, Inbred C57BL
/ Microtubules - physiology
/ Molecules
/ Phosphorylation
/ PNAS Plus
/ Proteins
/ Pyrin - metabolism
/ Rodents
/ Toxins
/ Tubulin Modulators - pharmacology
2016
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Site-specific phosphorylation and microtubule dynamics control Pyrin inflammasome activation
by
Liu, Wang
, Shao, Feng
, Wang, Yupeng
, Yang, Jieling
, Gao, Wenqing
in
14-3-3 Proteins - metabolism
/ Animals
/ Bacterial diseases
/ Bacterial Toxins - pharmacology
/ Biological Sciences
/ Bone marrow
/ Cells
/ Enterotoxins - pharmacology
/ HEK293 Cells
/ Humans
/ Immunology and Inflammation
/ Inflammasomes - physiology
/ Mice
/ Mice, Inbred C57BL
/ Microtubules - physiology
/ Molecules
/ Phosphorylation
/ PNAS Plus
/ Proteins
/ Pyrin - metabolism
/ Rodents
/ Toxins
/ Tubulin Modulators - pharmacology
2016
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Site-specific phosphorylation and microtubule dynamics control Pyrin inflammasome activation
by
Liu, Wang
, Shao, Feng
, Wang, Yupeng
, Yang, Jieling
, Gao, Wenqing
in
14-3-3 Proteins - metabolism
/ Animals
/ Bacterial diseases
/ Bacterial Toxins - pharmacology
/ Biological Sciences
/ Bone marrow
/ Cells
/ Enterotoxins - pharmacology
/ HEK293 Cells
/ Humans
/ Immunology and Inflammation
/ Inflammasomes - physiology
/ Mice
/ Mice, Inbred C57BL
/ Microtubules - physiology
/ Molecules
/ Phosphorylation
/ PNAS Plus
/ Proteins
/ Pyrin - metabolism
/ Rodents
/ Toxins
/ Tubulin Modulators - pharmacology
2016
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Site-specific phosphorylation and microtubule dynamics control Pyrin inflammasome activation
Journal Article
Site-specific phosphorylation and microtubule dynamics control Pyrin inflammasome activation
2016
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Overview
Pyrin, encoded by the MEFV gene, is best known for its gain-of-function mutations causing familial Mediterranean fever (FMF), an autoinflammatory disease. Pyrin forms a caspase-1–activating inflammasome in response to inactivating modifications of Rho GTPases by various bacterial toxins or effectors. Pyrin-mediated innate immunity is unique in that it senses bacterial virulence rather than microbial molecules, but its mechanism of activation is unknown. Here we show that Pyrin was phosphorylated in bone marrow-derived macrophages and dendritic cells. We identified Ser-205 and Ser-241 in mouse Pyrin whose phosphorylation resulted in inhibitory binding by cellular 14-3-3 proteins. The two serines underwent dephosphorylation upon toxin stimulation or bacterial infection, triggering 14-3-3 dissociation, which correlated with Pyrin inflammasome activation. We developed antibodies specific for phosphorylated Ser-205 and Ser-241, which confirmed the stimuli-induced dephosphorylation of endogenous Pyrin. Mutational analyses indicated that both phosphorylation and signal-induced dephosphorylation of Ser-205/241 are important for Pyrin activation. Moreover, microtubule drugs, including colchicine, commonly used to treat FMF, effectively blocked activation of the Pyrin inflammasome. These drugs did not affect Pyrin dephosphorylation and 14-3-3 dissociation but inhibited Pyrin-mediated apoptosis-associated Speck-like protein containing CARD (ASC) aggregation. Our study reveals that site-specific (de)phosphorylation and microtubule dynamics critically control Pyrin inflammasome activation, illustrating a fine and complex mechanism in cytosolic immunity.
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