C1orf106 is a colitis risk gene that regulates stability of epithelial adherens junctions

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Abstract

Polymorphisms in C1orf106 are associated with increased risk of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). However, the function of C1orf106 and the consequences of disease-associated polymorphisms are unknown. Here we demonstrate that C1orf106 regulates adherens junction stability by regulating the degradation of cytohesin-1, a guanine nucleotide exchange factor that controls activation of ARF6. By limiting cytohesin-1–dependent ARF6 activation, C1orf106 stabilizes adherens junctions. Consistent with this model, C1orf106–/– mice exhibit defects in the intestinal epithelial cell barrier, a phenotype observed in IBD patients that confers increased susceptibility to intestinal pathogens. Furthermore, the IBD risk variant increases C1orf106 ubiquitination and turnover with consequent functional impairments. These findings delineate a mechanism by which a genetic polymorphism fine-tunes intestinal epithelial barrier integrity and elucidate a fundamental mechanism of cellular junctional control.

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Mohanan, V., Nakata, T., Desch, A. N., Lévesque, C., Boroughs, A., Guzman, G., … Xavier, R. J. (2018). C1orf106 is a colitis risk gene that regulates stability of epithelial adherens junctions. Science, 359(6380), 1161–1166. https://doi.org/10.1126/science.aan0814

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