Abstract

Host defense against infection is induced by Toll-like and interleukin (IL)-1 receptors, and controlled by the transcription factor NF-κB. Our earlier studies have shown that IL-1 activation impacts cytoskeletal structure and that IL-1 receptor (IL-1RI) function is substrate-dependent. Here we identify a novel regulatory component, TILRR, which amplifies activation of IL-1RI and coordinates IL-1-induced control with mechanotransduction. We show that TILRR is a highly conserved and widely expressed enhancer of IL-1-regulated inflammatory responses and, further, that it is a membrane-bound glycosylated protein with sequence homology to members of the FRAS-1 family. We demonstrate that TILRR is recruited to the IL-1 receptor complex and magnifies signal amplification by increasing receptor expression and ligand binding. In addition, we show that the consequent potentiation of NF-κB is controlled through IL-1RI-associated signaling components in coordination with activation of the Ras GTPase. Using mutagenesis, we demonstrate that TILRR function is dependent on association with its signaling partner and, further, that formation of the TILRR-containing IL-1RI complex imparts enhanced association of the MyD88 adapter during ligand-induced activation of NF-κB. We conclude that TILRR is an IL-1RI co-receptor, which associates with the signaling receptor complex to enhance recruitment of MyD88 and control Ras-dependent amplification of NF-κB and inflammatory responses.

Highlights

  • The IL-1 receptor subfamily is a continuously growing group of regulatory proteins, named after the initially identified type I signaling receptor (IL-1RI) [5, 6]

  • We show that TILRR associates with the extracellular domain of IL-1RI and magnifies NF-␬B-regulated inflammatory responses by potentiating recruitment of MyD88 and linking TIR activation with mechanotransduction by controlling induction of the Ras GTPase

  • TILRR Is a Unique, Widely Expressed Protein, Which Controls IL-1RI-induced Inflammatory Responses—TILRR was detected because of its substrate-dependent association with IL-1RI [14], and identified through peptide mapping based on MALDI-TOF (Fig. 1A)

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Summary

Introduction

The IL-1 receptor subfamily is a continuously growing group of regulatory proteins, named after the initially identified type I signaling receptor (IL-1RI) [5, 6]. Increasing concentrations of a TILRR siRNA, demonstrated to inhibit TILRR expression by up to 60 – 80% (supplemental Fig. S3), resulted in a successive reduction in promoter activation of up to 80%, which, as the cDNA-induced amplification, affected ligand-controlled levels only.

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