1. Academic Validation
  2. Cysteine methylation disrupts ubiquitin-chain sensing in NF-κB activation

Cysteine methylation disrupts ubiquitin-chain sensing in NF-κB activation

  • Nature. 2011 Dec 11;481(7380):204-8. doi: 10.1038/nature10690.
Li Zhang 1 Xiaojun Ding Jixin Cui Hao Xu Jing Chen Yi-Nan Gong Liyan Hu Yan Zhou Jianning Ge Qiuhe Lu Liping Liu She Chen Feng Shao
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Graduate Program in Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences and Peking Union Medical College, Beijing 100730, China.
Abstract

NF-κB is crucial for innate immune defence against microbial Infection. Inhibition of NF-κB signalling has been observed with various Bacterial infections. The NF-κB pathway critically requires multiple ubiquitin-chain signals of different natures. The question of whether ubiquitin-chain signalling and its specificity in NF-κB activation are regulated during Infection, and how this regulation takes place, has not been explored. Here we show that human TAB2 and TAB3, ubiquitin-chain sensory proteins involved in NF-κB signalling, are directly inactivated by enteropathogenic Escherichia coli NleE, a conserved Bacterial type-III-secreted effector responsible for blocking host NF-κB signalling. NleE harboured an unprecedented S-adenosyl-l-methionine-dependent methyltransferase activity that specifically modified a zinc-coordinating cysteine in the Npl4 zinc finger (NZF) domains in TAB2 and TAB3. Cysteine-methylated TAB2-NZF and TAB3-NZF (truncated proteins only comprising the NZF domain) lost the zinc ion as well as the ubiquitin-chain binding activity. Ectopically expressed or type-III-secretion-system-delivered NleE methylated TAB2 and TAB3 in host cells and diminished their ubiquitin-chain binding activity. Replacement of the NZF domain of TAB3 with the NleE methylation-insensitive Npl4 NZF domain resulted in NleE-resistant NF-κB activation. Given the prevalence of zinc-finger motifs and activation of cysteine thiol by zinc binding, methylation of zinc-finger cysteine might regulate other eukaryotic pathways in addition to NF-κB signalling.

Figures