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Conformational switching of the pseudokinase domain promotes human MLKL tetramerization and cell death by necroptosis

Authors :
Michael D. W. Griffin
Guillaume Lessene
Joanne M Hildebrand
Isabelle S Lucet
Brian J. Smith
Samuel N. Young
Wilhelmus J A Kersten
Maria C. Tanzer
Annette V. Jacobsen
John Silke
Peter E. Czabotar
Angus D. Cowan
James M. Murphy
Emma J. Petrie
Jarrod J. Sandow
Ahmad Wardak
Lung-Yu Liang
Weiwen Dai
Andrew I. Webb
Source :
Nature Communications, Nature Communications, Vol 9, Iss 1, Pp 1-15 (2018)
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
Nature Publishing Group UK, 2018.

Abstract

Necroptotic cell death is mediated by the most terminal known effector of the pathway, MLKL. Precisely how phosphorylation of the MLKL pseudokinase domain activation loop by the upstream kinase, RIPK3, induces unmasking of the N-terminal executioner four-helix bundle (4HB) domain of MLKL, higher-order assemblies, and permeabilization of plasma membranes remains poorly understood. Here, we reveal the existence of a basal monomeric MLKL conformer present in human cells prior to exposure to a necroptotic stimulus. Following activation, toggling within the MLKL pseudokinase domain promotes 4HB domain disengagement from the pseudokinase domain αC helix and pseudocatalytic loop, to enable formation of a necroptosis-inducing tetramer. In contrast to mouse MLKL, substitution of RIPK3 substrate sites in the human MLKL pseudokinase domain completely abrogated necroptotic signaling. Therefore, while the pseudokinase domains of mouse and human MLKL function as molecular switches to control MLKL activation, the underlying mechanism differs between species.<br />RIPK3-mediated phosphorylation of the mixed lineage kinase domain-like (MLKL) pseudokinase is thought to be the trigger for MLKL activation during necroptotic signaling. Here the authors provide evidence that the transition of human MLKL from a monomeric state to a tetramer is essential for necroptosis signalling.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20411723
Volume :
9
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature Communications
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....0905eae8c46de08ff990f741c301aced