4.6 Article

Glycogen Synthase Kinase-3β Stabilizes the Interleukin (IL)-22 Receptor from Proteasomal Degradation in Murine Lung Epithelia

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 289, Issue 25, Pages 17610-17619

Publisher

AMER SOC BIOCHEMISTRY MOLECULAR BIOLOGY INC
DOI: 10.1074/jbc.M114.551747

Keywords

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Funding

  1. United States Department of Veterans Affairs, Veterans Health Administration, Office of Research and Development, Biomedical Laboratory Research and Development
  2. United States Department of Veterans Affairs
  3. National Institutes of Health R01 [HL096376, HL097376, HL098174, HL081784, UH2 HL123502, P01 HL114453, HL116472, HL01916]
  4. American Heart Association [12SDG9050005]

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Signaling through the interleukin (IL)-22 cytokine axis provides essential immune protection in the setting of extracellular infection as part of type 17 immunity. Molecular regulation of IL-22 receptor (IL-22R) protein levels is unknown. In murine lung epithelia, IL-22R is a relatively short-lived protein (t(1/2) similar to 1.5 h) degraded by the ubiquitin proteasome under normal unstimulated conditions, but its degradation is accelerated by IL-22 treatment. Lys(449) within the intracellular C-terminal domain of the IL-22R serves as a ubiquitin acceptor site as disruption of this site by deletion or site-directed mutagenesis creates an IL-22R variant that, when expressed in cells, is degradation-resistant and not ubiquitinated. Glycogen synthase kinase (GSK)-3 beta phosphorylates the IL-22R within a consensus phosphorylation signature at Ser(410) and Ser(414), and IL-22 treatment of cells triggers GSK-3 beta inactivation. GSK-3 beta overexpression results in accumulation of IL-22R protein, whereas GSK-3 beta depletion in cells reduces levels of the receptor. Mutagenesis of IL-22R at Ser(410) and Ser(414) results in receptor variants that display reduced phosphorylation levels and are more labile as compared with wild-type IL-22R when expressed in cells. Further, the cytoskeletal protein cortactin, which is important for epithelial spreading and barrier formation, is phosphorylated and activated at the epithelial cell leading edge after treatment with IL-22, but this effect is reduced after GSK-3 beta knockdown. These findings reveal the ability of GSK-3 beta to modulate IL-22R protein stability that might have significant implications for cyto-protective functions and therapeutic targeting of the IL-22 signaling axis.

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