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Publication : Release from UNC93B1 reinforces the compartmentalized activation of select TLRs.

First Author  Majer O Year  2019
Journal  Nature Volume  575
Issue  7782 Pages  371-374
PubMed ID  31546247 Mgi Jnum  J:287503
Mgi Id  MGI:6407623 Doi  10.1038/s41586-019-1611-7
Citation  Majer O, et al. (2019) Release from UNC93B1 reinforces the compartmentalized activation of select TLRs. Nature 575(7782):371-374
abstractText  Nucleic acid-sensing Toll-like receptors (TLRs) are subject to complex regulation to facilitate the recognition of microbial DNA and RNA while limiting the recognition of an organism's own nucleic acids(1). Failure to properly regulate these TLRs can lead to autoimmune and autoinflammatory diseases(2-6). Intracellular localization of these receptors is thought to be crucial for the discrimination between self and non-self(7), but the molecular mechanisms that reinforce compartmentalized activation of intracellular TLRs remain poorly understood. Here we describe a mechanism that prevents the activation of TLR9 from locations other than endosomes. This control is achieved through the regulated release of the receptor from its trafficking chaperone UNC93B1, which occurs only within endosomes and is required for ligand binding and signal transduction. Preventing release of TLR9 from UNC93B1, either by mutations in UNC93B1 that increase affinity for TLR9 or through an artificial tether that impairs release, results in defective signalling. Whereas TLR9 and TLR3 are released from UNC93B1, TLR7 does not dissociate from UNC93B1 in endosomes and is regulated by distinct mechanisms. This work defines a checkpoint that reinforces the compartmentalized activation of TLR9, and provides a mechanism by which activation of individual endosomal TLRs may be distinctly regulated.
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