TY - JOUR
T1 - A ubiquitin-proteasome pathway represses the Drosophila immune deficiency signaling cascade
AU - Khush, Ranjiv S.
AU - Cornwell, William D.
AU - Uram, Jennifer N.
AU - Lemaitre, Bruno
N1 - Funding Information:
We thank Kathyrn Anderson, Dominique Ferrondon, Dan Hultmark, Jiang Jin, Bernadette Limbourg-Bouchon, François Schwiesguth, the Bloomington stock center, and the Umea stock center for providing stocks. François Leulier, Terence Murphy, and Ennio De Gregorio contributed help, discussion, and comments on the manuscript. We are especially grateful to Terence Murphy for providing SkpA trangenic lines prior to publication and to Dominique Thomas for his constant guidance. This project was funded by Centre National de la Recherche (CNRS)-ATIPE and Association pour la Recherche Contre le Cancer grants to B.L. R.S.K. was supported by fellowships from the Fondation Recherche Médicale and the CNRS.
PY - 2002/10/15
Y1 - 2002/10/15
N2 - Background: The inducible production of antimicrobial peptides is a major immune response in Drosophila. The genes encoding these peptides are activated by NF-κB transcription factors that are controlled by two independent signaling cascades: the Toll pathway that regulates the NF-κB homologs, Dorsal and DIF; and the IMD pathway that regulates the compound NF-κB-like protein, Relish. Although numerous components of each pathway that are required to induce antimicrobial gene expression have been identified, less is known about the mechanisms that either repress antimicrobial genes in the absence of infection or that downregulate these genes after infection. Results: In a screen for factors that negatively regulate the IMD pathway, we isolated two partial loss-of-function mutations in the SkpA gene that constitutively induce the antibacterial peptide gene, Diptericin, a target of the IMD pathway. These mutations do not affect the systemic expression of the antifungal peptide gene, Drosomycin, a target of the Toll pathway. SkpA encodes a homolog of the yeast and human Skp1 proteins. Skp1 proteins function as subunits of SCF-E3 ubiquitin ligases that target substrates to the 26S proteasome, and mutations affecting either the Drosophila SCF components, Slimb and dCullin1, or the proteasome also induce Diptericin expression. In cultured cells, inhibition of SkpA and Slimb via RNAi increases levels of both the full-length Relish protein and the processed Rel-homology domain. Conclusions: In contrast to other NF-κB activation pathways, the Drosophila IMD pathway is repressed by the ubiquitin-proteasome system. A possible target of this proteolytic activity is the Relish transcription factor, suggesting a mechanism for NF-κB downregulation in Drosophila.
AB - Background: The inducible production of antimicrobial peptides is a major immune response in Drosophila. The genes encoding these peptides are activated by NF-κB transcription factors that are controlled by two independent signaling cascades: the Toll pathway that regulates the NF-κB homologs, Dorsal and DIF; and the IMD pathway that regulates the compound NF-κB-like protein, Relish. Although numerous components of each pathway that are required to induce antimicrobial gene expression have been identified, less is known about the mechanisms that either repress antimicrobial genes in the absence of infection or that downregulate these genes after infection. Results: In a screen for factors that negatively regulate the IMD pathway, we isolated two partial loss-of-function mutations in the SkpA gene that constitutively induce the antibacterial peptide gene, Diptericin, a target of the IMD pathway. These mutations do not affect the systemic expression of the antifungal peptide gene, Drosomycin, a target of the Toll pathway. SkpA encodes a homolog of the yeast and human Skp1 proteins. Skp1 proteins function as subunits of SCF-E3 ubiquitin ligases that target substrates to the 26S proteasome, and mutations affecting either the Drosophila SCF components, Slimb and dCullin1, or the proteasome also induce Diptericin expression. In cultured cells, inhibition of SkpA and Slimb via RNAi increases levels of both the full-length Relish protein and the processed Rel-homology domain. Conclusions: In contrast to other NF-κB activation pathways, the Drosophila IMD pathway is repressed by the ubiquitin-proteasome system. A possible target of this proteolytic activity is the Relish transcription factor, suggesting a mechanism for NF-κB downregulation in Drosophila.
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U2 - 10.1016/S0960-9822(02)01214-9
DO - 10.1016/S0960-9822(02)01214-9
M3 - Article
C2 - 12401167
AN - SCOPUS:0037108474
SN - 0960-9822
VL - 12
SP - 1728
EP - 1737
JO - Current Biology
JF - Current Biology
IS - 20
ER -