1. Academic Validation
  2. The autophagy regulator Rubicon is a feedback inhibitor of CARD9-mediated host innate immunity

The autophagy regulator Rubicon is a feedback inhibitor of CARD9-mediated host innate immunity

  • Cell Host Microbe. 2012 Mar 15;11(3):277-89. doi: 10.1016/j.chom.2012.01.019.
Chul-Su Yang 1 Mary Rodgers Chan-Ki Min Jong-Soo Lee Lara Kingeter June-Yong Lee Ambrose Jong Igor Kramnik Xin Lin Jae U Jung
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Department of Molecular Microbiology and Immunology, University of Southern California, Keck School of Medicine, Los Angeles, CA 90033, USA.
Abstract

Assembly of a scaffold consisting of CARD9, BCL10, and MALT1 (CBM complex) is critical for effective signaling by multiple Pattern Recognition Receptors (PRRs) including Dectin and RIG-I. The RUN domain Beclin-1-interacting cysteine-rich-containing Rubicon protein associates constitutively with the Beclin-UVRAG-Vps34 complex under normal conditions to regulate Autophagy. Rubicon also interacts with the phagocytic NADPH-oxidase complex upon TLR stimulation to induce potent antimicrobial responses. Here, we show Rubicon is a physiological feedback inhibitor of CBM-mediated PRR signaling, preventing unbalanced proinflammatory responses. Upon Dectin-1- or RIG-I-mediated activation, Rubicon dynamically exchanges binding partners from 14-3-3β to CARD9 in a stimulation-specific and phosphorylation-dependent manner, disassembling the CBM signaling complex and ultimately terminating PRR-induced cytokine production. Remarkably, Rubicon's actions in the Autophagy complex, phagocytosis complex, and CBM complex are functionally and genetically separable. Rubicon thus differentially targets signaling complexes, depending on environmental stimuli, and may function to coordinate various immune responses against microbial Infection.

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