4.8 Article

A20 Restricts Ubiquitination of Pro-Interleukin-1β Protein Complexes and Suppresses NLRP3 Inflammasome Activity

Journal

IMMUNITY
Volume 42, Issue 1, Pages 55-67

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.immuni.2014.12.031

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Funding

  1. NIH
  2. UCSF Liver Center
  3. CCFA Research Fellowship Award
  4. Howard Hughes Medical Institute
  5. Biomedical Technology Research Resources Program at the National Institute of General Medical Sciences [8P41GM103481]
  6. [T32 AI007334]
  7. [T32 DK007007]

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Inappropriate inflammasome activation contributes to multiple human diseases, but the mechanisms by which inflammasomes are suppressed are poorly understood. The NF-kappa B inhibitor A20 is a ubiquitin-modifying enzyme that might be critical in preventing human inflammatory diseases. Here, we report that A20-deficient macrophages, unlike normal cells, exhibit spontaneous NLRP3 inflammasome activity to LPS alone. The kinase RIPK3, but not the adaptor MyD88, is required for this response. In normal cells, A20 constitutively associates with caspase-1 and pro-IL-1 beta, and NLRP3 activation further promotes A20 recruitment to the inflammasome. Pro-IL-1 beta also co-immunoprecipitates with RIPK1, RIPK3, caspase-1, and caspase-8 in a complex that is modified with K63-linked and unanchored polyubiquitin. In A20-deficient macrophages, this pro-IL-1 beta-associated ubiquitination is markedly increased in a RIPK3-dependent manner. Mass spectrometric and mutational analyses reveal that K133 of pro-IL-1 beta is a physiological ubiquitination site that supports processing. Our study reveals a mechanism by which A20 prevents inflammatory diseases.

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