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Structural basis of RIP2 activation and signaling

Authors :
Franklin L. Zhong
Bruno Reversade
Daniel Eng Thiam Teo
Yibo Jin
Qin Gong
Jiawen Zhang
Zhan Yin
Bin Wu
Zongli Li
Yaming Zhang
Zhao Zhi Boo
Renliang Yang
Long Ziqi
Shashi Bhushan
Center for Reproductive Medicine
ACS - Diabetes & metabolism
ARD - Amsterdam Reproduction and Development
ACS - Heart failure & arrhythmias
Reversade, Bruno
Gong, Qin
Long, Ziqi
Zhong, Franklin L.
Teo, Daniel Eng Thiam
Jin, Yibo
Yin, Zhan
Boo, Zhao Zhi
Zhang, Yaming
Zhang, Jiawen
Yang, Renliang
Bhushan, Shashi
Li, Zongli
Wu, Bin
School of Medicine
Department of Histology and Embryology
School of Biological Sciences
Institute of Structural Biology
Source :
Nature Communications, Vol 9, Iss 1, Pp 1-13 (2018), Nature communications, 9(1):4993. Nature Publishing Group, Nature Communications
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
Nature Publishing Group, 2018.

Abstract

Signals arising from bacterial infections are detected by pathogen recognition receptors (PRRs) and are transduced by specialized adapter proteins in mammalian cells. The Receptor-interacting-serine/threonine-protein kinase 2 (RIPK2 or RIP2) is such an adapter protein that is critical for signal propagation of the Nucleotide-binding-oligomerization-domain-containing proteins 1/2 (NOD1 and NOD2). Dysregulation of this signaling pathway leads to defects in bacterial detection and in some cases autoimmune diseases. Here, we show that the Caspase-activation-and-recruitment-domain (CARD) of RIP2 (RIP2-CARD) forms oligomeric structures upon stimulation by either NOD1-CARD or NOD2-2CARD. We reconstitute this complex, termed the RIPosome in vitro and solve the cryo-EM filament structure of the active RIP2-CARD complex at 4.1 Å resolution. The structure suggests potential mechanisms by which CARD domains from NOD1 and NOD2 initiate the oligomerization process of RIP2-CARD. Together with structure guided mutagenesis experiments at the CARD-CARD interfaces, we demonstrate molecular mechanisms how RIP2 is activated and self-propagating such signal.<br />The pathogen recognition receptors NOD1/2 recognize bacterial cell wall components and signal through their downstream adapter kinase RIP2 via a CARD (Caspase activation and recruitment domain) mediated oligomerization process. Here the authors present the cryo-EM structure of the active RIP2-CARD filament and discuss implications for NOD1/2-RIP2 signalling.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20411723
Volume :
9
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature Communications
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....dd24949892b6b033045e393783224eb9