NF-κB activation downstream of antigen receptor engagement is a highly regulated event required for lymphocyte activation during the adaptive immune response. The pathway is often dysregulated in lymphoma, leading to constitutive NF-κB activity that supports the aberrant proliferation of transformed lymphocytes. To identify novel regulators of antigen receptor signaling to NF-κB, we developed BRET-based Interaction Cloning (BRIC), a screening strategy that can detect protein-protein interactions in live mammalian cells in a high-throughput manner. Using this strategy we identified the RING finger protein RNF181 as an interactor of CARD11, a key signaling scaffold in the antigen receptor pathway. We present evidence that RNF181 functions as an E3 ubiquitin ligase to inhibit antigen receptor signaling to NF-κB downstream of CARD11. Levels of the obligate signaling protein Bcl10 are reduced by RNF181 even prior to signaling and Bcl10 can serve as a substrate for RNF181 E3 ligase activity in vitro . Furthermore, RNF181 limits the proliferation of human Diffuse Large B Cell Lymphoma cells that depend upon aberrant CARD11 signaling to NF-κB for growth and survival in culture. Our results define a new regulatory checkpoint that can modulate the output of CARD11 signaling to NF-κB in both normal and transformed lymphocytes.
CITATION STYLE
Pedersen, S. M., Chan, W., Jattani, R. P., Mackie, deMauri S., & Pomerantz, J. L. (2016). Negative Regulation of CARD11 Signaling and Lymphoma Cell Survival by the E3 Ubiquitin Ligase RNF181. Molecular and Cellular Biology, 36(5), 794–808. https://doi.org/10.1128/mcb.00876-15
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