학술논문

Regulated proteolysis of the IFNaR2 subunit of the interferon-alpha receptor.
Document Type
Article
Source
Oncogene. 9/16/2004, Vol. 23 Issue 42, p7076-7086. 11p.
Subject
*TRANSCRIPTION factors
*ANTIGEN analysis
*COCARCINOGENS
*CYTOKINES
*PHOSPHOTRANSFERASES
*PROTEIN kinase C
*FLUORESCENT polymers
Language
ISSN
0950-9232
Abstract
The type I interferons (IFNs) bind surface receptors, induce JAK kinases and activate STAT transcription factors to stimulate the transcription of genes downstream of IFN-stimulated response elements (ISREs). In this study, we demonstrate that IFNaR2, a subunit of the type I IFN receptor, is proteolytically cleaved in a regulated manner. Immunoblotting shows that multi-step cleavage occurs in response to phorbol ester (PMA) and IFN-a, generating both a transmembrane‘stub’and the intracellular domain (ICD), similar to Notch proteolysis. Isolated membrane fractions process IFNaR2 to release the ICD. A chimeric receptor construct is utilized to show that cleavage requires the presenilins and occurs in response to epidermal growth factor and protein kinase C-doverexpression, as well as PMA and type I IFNs. Fluorescence microscopy demonstrates that a green fluorescent protein-ICD fusion localizes predominantly to the nucleus. A fusion between the ICD and the Gal4 DNA-binding domain represses transcription, in a histone deacetylase-dependent manner, of a Gal4 upstream activating sequence-regulated reporter, while overexpression of the ICD alone represses transcription of a reporter linked to an ISRE. Proteolytic cleavage events may facilitate receptor turnover or, more likely, function as a mechanism for signaling similar to that employed by Notch and the Alzheimer's precursor protein.Oncogene (2004) 23, 7076-7086. doi:10.1038/sj.onc.1207955 Published online 2 August 2004 [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]