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Publication : Cryoelectron Tomography of the NAIP5/NLRC4 Inflammasome: Implications for NLR Activation.

First Author  Diebolder CA Year  2015
Journal  Structure Volume  23
Issue  12 Pages  2349-57
PubMed ID  26585513 Mgi Jnum  J:247416
Mgi Id  MGI:5926614 Doi  10.1016/j.str.2015.10.001
Citation  Diebolder CA, et al. (2015) Cryoelectron Tomography of the NAIP5/NLRC4 Inflammasome: Implications for NLR Activation. Structure 23(12):2349-57
abstractText  Inflammasomes are high molecular weight protein complexes that play a crucial role in innate immunity by activating caspase-1. Inflammasome formation is initiated when molecules originating from invading microorganisms activate nucleotide-binding domain and leucine-rich repeat-containing receptors (NLRs) and induce NLR multimerization. Little is known about the conformational changes involved in NLR activation and the structural organization of NLR multimers. Here, we show by cryoelectron tomography that flagellin-induced NAIP5/NLRC4 multimers form right- and left-handed helical polymers with a diameter of 28 nm and a pitch of 6.5 nm. Subtomogram averaging produced an electron density map at 4 nm resolution, which was used for rigid body fitting of NLR subdomains derived from the crystal structure of dormant NLRC4. The resulting structural model of inflammasome-incorporated NLRC4 indicates that a prominent rotation of the LRR domain of NLRC4 is necessary for multimer formation, providing unprecedented insight into the conformational changes that accompany NLR activation.
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