Abstract

Interferon regulatory factor (IRF)-8/interferon consensus sequence-binding protein is regulated by both transcription and degradation. IRF-8 induced in peritoneal macrophages by interferon-gamma and lipopolysaccharide was degraded rapidly, and degradation of IRF-8 was blocked by MG132, the proteasome inhibitor, but inhibitors of calpain and lysosomal enzymes had no effect. The ubiquitination of IRF-8 was shown by co-immunoprecipitation from RAW264.7 macrophages retrovirally transduced with IRF-8 and hemagglutinin-ubiquitin. The dominant negative ubiquitin mutants K48R and K29R inhibited IRF-8 degradation in 293T cells, confirming the relationship between ubiquitination of IRF-8 and its degradation. IRF-8 carboxyl-terminal truncation mutants were not ubiquitinated and were consequently stable, indicating that the carboxyl-terminal domain of IRF-8 controls ubiquitination. The ubiquitin-protein isopeptide ligase (E3) that ubiquitinated IRF-8 was likely to be Cbl, which formed a complex with IRF-8, demonstrable by both immunoprecipitation and gel filtration. Furthermore, IRF-8 stability was increased by dominant negative Cbl, and IRF-8 ubiquitination was significantly attenuated in Cbl-/- cells. Reflecting increased stability and expression, the IRF-8 carboxyl-terminal deletion mutant induced interleukin (IL)-12 p40 promoter activity much more strongly than IRF-8 did. Furthermore, IRF-8-induced IL-12 p40 synthesis in RAW264.7 cells was enhanced by dominant negative Cbl, and peritoneal macrophages from Cbl-/- mice showed increased IL-12 p40 protein production. Taken together, these results suggest that the proteasomal degradation of IRF-8 mediated by the ubiquitin E3 ligase Cbl down-regulates IL-12 expression.

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