4.6 Article

Carboxyl Terminus of HSC70-interacting Protein (CHIP) Down-regulates NF-κB-inducing Kinase (NIK) and Suppresses NIK-induced Liver Injury

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JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY
卷 290, 期 18, 页码 11704-11714

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AMER SOC BIOCHEMISTRY MOLECULAR BIOLOGY INC
DOI: 10.1074/jbc.M114.635086

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  1. Michigan Diabetes Research and Training Center (National Institutes of Health) [DK020572]
  2. Michigan Metabolomics and Obesity Center (National Institutes of Health) [DK089503]
  3. University of Michigan Comprehensive Cancer Center (National Institutes of Health) [CA46592]
  4. University of Michigan Nathan Shock Center (National Institutes of Health) [P30AG013283]
  5. University of Michigan Gut Peptide Research Center (National Institutes of Health) [DK34933]

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Ser/Thr kinase NIK (NF-kappa B-inducing kinase) mediates the activation of the noncanonical NF-kappa B2 pathway, and it plays an important role in regulating immune cell development and liver homeostasis. NIK levels are extremely low in quiescent cells due to ubiquitin/proteasome-mediated degradation, and cytokines stimulate NIK activation through increasing NIK stability; however, regulation of NIK stability is not fully understood. Here we identified CHIP (carboxyl terminus of HSC70-interacting protein) as a new negative regulator of NIK. CHIP contains three N-terminal tetratricopeptide repeats (TPRs), a middle dimerization domain, and a C-terminal U-box. The U-box domain contains ubiquitin E3 ligase activity that promotes ubiquitination of CHIP-bound partners. We observed that CHIP bound to NIK via its TPR domain. In both HEK293 and primary hepatocytes, overexpression of CHIP markedly decreased NIK levels at least in part through increasing ubiquitination and degradation of NIK. Accordingly, CHIP suppressed NIK-induced activation of the noncanonical NF-kappa B2 pathway. CHIP also bound to TRAF3, and CHIP and TRAF3 acted coordinately to efficiently promote NIK degradation. The TPR but not the U-box domain was required for CHIP to promote NIK degradation. In mice, hepatocyte-specific overexpression of NIK resulted in liver inflammation and injury, leading to death, and liver-specific expression of CHIP reversed the detrimental effects of hepatic NIK. Our data suggest that CHIP/TRAF3/NIK interactions recruit NIK to E3 ligase complexes for ubiquitination and degradation, thus maintaining NIK at low levels. Defects in CHIP regulation of NIK may result in aberrant NIK activation in the liver, contributing to live injury, inflammation, and disease.

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