4.7 Article

LUBAC is required for RIG-I sensing of RNA viruses

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CELL DEATH AND DIFFERENTIATION
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SPRINGERNATURE
DOI: 10.1038/s41418-023-01233-x

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The ability of cells to mount an interferon response to virus infections depends on the intracellular nucleic acid sensing pattern recognition receptors (PRRs). The study shows that the linear ubiquitin chain assembly complex (LUBAC) regulates RIG-I signaling, indicating its role in antiviral innate immune responses.
The ability of cells to mount an interferon response to virus infections depends on intracellular nucleic acid sensing pattern recognition receptors (PRRs). RIG-I is an intracellular PRR that binds short double-stranded viral RNAs to trigger MAVS-dependent signalling. The RIG-I/MAVS signalling complex requires the coordinated activity of multiple kinases and E3 ubiquitin ligases to activate the transcription factors that drive type I and type III interferon production from infected cells. The linear ubiquitin chain assembly complex (LUBAC) regulates the activity of multiple receptor signalling pathways in both ligase-dependent and -independent ways. Here, we show that the three proteins that constitute LUBAC have separate functions in regulating RIG-I signalling. Both HOIP, the E3 ligase capable of generating M1-ubiquitin chains, and LUBAC accessory protein HOIL-1 are required for viral RNA sensing by RIG-I. The third LUBAC component, SHARPIN, is not required for RIG-I signalling. These data cement the role of LUBAC as a positive regulator of RIG-I signalling and as an important component of antiviral innate immune responses.

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