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Unrestrained cleavage of Roquin-1 by MALT1 induces spontaneous T cell activation and the development of autoimmunity

Constitutive activation of the MALT1 paracaspase in conventional T cells of Malt1(TBM/TBM) (TRAF6 Binding Mutant = TBM) mice causes fatal inflammation and autoimmunity, but the involved targets and underlying molecular mechanisms are unknown. We genetically rendered a single MALT1 substrate, the RNA...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Schmidt, Henrik, Raj, Timsse, O'Neill, Thomas J., Muschaweckh, Andreas, Giesert, Florian, Negraschus, Arlinda, Hoefig, Kai P., Behrens, Gesine, Esser, Lena, Baumann, Christina, Feederle, Regina, Plaza-Sirvent, Carlos, Geerlof, Arie, Gewies, Andreas, Isay, Sophie E., Ruland, Jürgen, Schmitz, Ingo, Wurst, Wolfgang, Korn, Thomas, Krappmann, Daniel, Heissmeyer, Vigo
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: National Academy of Sciences 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10691344/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37988467
http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2309205120
Descripción
Sumario:Constitutive activation of the MALT1 paracaspase in conventional T cells of Malt1(TBM/TBM) (TRAF6 Binding Mutant = TBM) mice causes fatal inflammation and autoimmunity, but the involved targets and underlying molecular mechanisms are unknown. We genetically rendered a single MALT1 substrate, the RNA-binding protein (RBP) Roquin-1, insensitive to MALT1 cleavage. These Rc3h1(Mins/Mins) mice showed normal immune homeostasis. Combining Rc3h1(Mins/Mins) alleles with those encoding for constitutively active MALT1 (TBM) prevented spontaneous T cell activation and restored viability of Malt1(TBM/TBM) mice. Mechanistically, we show how antigen/MHC recognition is translated by MALT1 into Roquin cleavage and derepression of Roquin targets. Increasing T cell receptor (TCR) signals inactivated Roquin more effectively, and only high TCR strength enabled derepression of high-affinity targets to promote Th17 differentiation. Induction of experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE) revealed increased cleavage of Roquin-1 in disease-associated Th17 compared to Th1 cells in the CNS. T cells from Rc3h1(Mins/Mins) mice did not efficiently induce the high-affinity Roquin-1 target IκB(NS) in response to TCR stimulation, showed reduced Th17 differentiation, and Rc3h1(Mins/Mins) mice were protected from EAE. These data demonstrate how TCR signaling and MALT1 activation utilize graded cleavage of Roquin to differentially regulate target mRNAs that control T cell activation and differentiation as well as the development of autoimmunity.