Abstract

The mammalian interleukin 1 receptor-like 1 receptor (IL1RL1), commonly known as ST2, is thought to downregulate TLR signalling by sequestering the signalling adapter MYD88 (myeloid differentiation primary response protein 88). ST2 sequences are known in several fish species, but none of them have functionally been examined. We characterised ST2 from rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) and the structure of its encoding gene. The primary sequence of ST2 is only weakly conserved from fish to human. However, the amino acid sequences forming the interfaces for ST2 and MYD88 interaction are well conserved throughout evolution. High similarity of the gene segmentation unambiguously proves the common ancestry of fish and mammalian ST2. Trout ST2 and trout MYD88 genes were constitutively expressed in embryonic, larval and adult trout. In vivo infection with Aeromonas salmonicida did not modulate the mRNA levels of both factors. Overexpressing trout ST2 in the mammalian HEK-293 reconstitution system of TLR2 signalling quenched the Escherichia coli–induced activation of NF-κB and SAA promoters in a dose-dependent fashion. The expression of GFP-tagged trout ST2 in human HEK-293 or trout CHSE-214 cells surprisingly revealed that (i) ST2 localised abundantly at the nuclear membrane rather than at the cell membrane and (ii) the coexpression of both ST2 and MYD88 allowed the translocation of trout MYD88 from cytoplasm to nucleus, as assessed using confocal microscopy and Western blotting. Hence, we validated that trout ST2 is a dampener of TLR signalling and interacts with MYD88. The spatial distribution of these factors raises questions about how this repressive mechanism functions.

Highlights

  • ST2 is encoded by the interleukin 1 receptor-like 1 gene (IL1RL1; HUGO gene ID: 5998)

  • The cDNA sequence suggests that the trout ST2 factor comprises 599 aa residues (GenBank: CCT61382), if the conceptual translation of this sequence commences at that ATG start codon, which had been used for the previously published ST2 protein sequence from salmon (Stansberg et al, 2003)

  • We note that the trout and the salmon cDNA sequence feature 21 and 27 nucleotides upstream another ATG codon

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Summary

Introduction

ST2 is encoded by the interleukin 1 receptor-like 1 gene (IL1RL1; HUGO gene ID: 5998) It was originally described as serum stimulation 2 factor revealing induced expression after stimulating the proliferation of quiescent murine BALB/c-3T3 cells (Tominaga, 1989). Recent reviews (Lott et al, 2015; Oboki et al, 2010) comprehensively document that the mammalian ST2 factor and its variants exert multiple functions by contributing to cell proliferation (Tominaga et al, 2015); constituting part of the receptor for interleukin IL33 (Schmitz et al, 2005) thereby transmitting its functions during inflammation and allergy; and dampening pathogen-induced signalling from toll-like receptors (TLRs; Brint et al, 2004). The activated ternary signalling complex ST2L-IL1RAP-IL33 recruits TIR domain-containing adapters, which in turn activate MAPK

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