A critical role of RICK/RIP2 polyubiquitination in Nod-induced NF-kappaB activation.

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Citation

Hasegawa M, Fujimoto Y, Lucas PC, Nakano H, Fukase K, Nunez G, Inohara N

A critical role of RICK/RIP2 polyubiquitination in Nod-induced NF-kappaB activation.

EMBO J. 2008 Jan 23;27(2):373-83. Epub 2007 Dec 13.

PubMed ID
18079694 [ View in PubMed
]
Abstract

Nod1 and Nod2 are intracellular proteins that are involved in host recognition of specific bacterial molecules and are genetically associated with several inflammatory diseases. Nod1 and Nod2 stimulation activates NF-kappaB through RICK, a caspase-recruitment domain-containing kinase. However, the mechanism by which RICK activates NF-kappaB in response to Nod1 and Nod2 stimulation is unknown. Here we show that RICK is conjugated with lysine-63-linked polyubiquitin chains at lysine 209 (K209) located in its kinase domain upon Nod1 or Nod2 stimulation and by induced oligomerization of RICK. Polyubiquitination of RICK at K209 was essential for RICK-mediated IKK activation and cytokine/chemokine secretion. However, RICK polyubiquitination did not require the kinase activity of RICK or alter the interaction of RICK with NEMO, a regulatory subunit of IkappaB kinase (IKK). Instead, polyubiquitination of RICK was found to mediate the recruitment of TAK1, a kinase that was found to be essential for Nod1-induced signaling. Thus, RICK polyubiquitination links TAK1 to IKK complexes, a critical step in Nod1/Nod2-mediated NF-kappaB activation.

DrugBank Data that Cites this Article

Polypeptides
NameUniProt ID
NF-kappa-B essential modulatorQ9Y6K9Details
Receptor-interacting serine/threonine-protein kinase 2O43353Details