1. Ester‐linked ubiquitination by HOIL‐1 controls immune signalling by shaping the linear ubiquitin landscape
- Author
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Jonathan N. Pruneda and Rune Busk Damgaard
- Subjects
biology ,Ubiquitin ,Chemistry ,Ubiquitin-Protein Ligases ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Ubiquitination ,Esters ,Cell Biology ,Biochemistry ,Ubiquitin ligase ,Cell biology ,Serine ,Immune system ,Cytokine ,LUBAC complex ,biology.protein ,medicine ,Threonine ,Receptor ,Molecular Biology ,Signal Transduction - Abstract
Ester-linked ubiquitination of serine or threonine residues - or even lipids - has emerged as a new regulatory earmark in cell signalling. Petrova et al. (2021) now reveal that ubiquitin esterification by the atypical ubiquitin ligase HOIL-1, a component of the LUBAC complex, is critical for proper formation of linear ubiquitin chains and control of immune signalling in T cells and macrophages. Surprisingly, ester-linked ubiquitination can either promote or inhibit linear ubiquitin conjugation and cytokine production depending on the receptor and immune cell engaged. Comment on: https://doi.org/10.1111/febs.15896.
- Published
- 2021
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