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MALT-1 mediates IL-17 neural signaling to regulate C. elegans behavior, immunity and longevity

Authors :
Flynn, Sean M
Chen, Changchun
Artan, Murat
Barratt, Stephen
Crisp, Alastair
Nelson, Geoffrey M
Peak-Chew, Sew-Yeu
Begum, Farida
Skehel, Mark
de Bono, Mario
Flynn, Sean M
Chen, Changchun
Artan, Murat
Barratt, Stephen
Crisp, Alastair
Nelson, Geoffrey M
Peak-Chew, Sew-Yeu
Begum, Farida
Skehel, Mark
de Bono, Mario
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Besides pro-inflammatory roles, the ancient cytokine interleukin-17 (IL-17) modulates neural circuit function. We investigate IL-17 signaling in neurons, and the extent it can alter organismal phenotypes. We combine immunoprecipitation and mass spectrometry to biochemically characterize endogenous signaling complexes that function downstream of IL-17 receptors in C. elegans neurons. We identify the paracaspase MALT-1 as a critical output of the pathway. MALT1 mediates signaling from many immune receptors in mammals, but was not previously implicated in IL-17 signaling or nervous system function. C. elegans MALT-1 forms a complex with homologs of Act1 and IRAK and appears to function both as a scaffold and a protease. MALT-1 is expressed broadly in the C. elegans nervous system, and neuronal IL-17–MALT-1 signaling regulates multiple phenotypes, including escape behavior, associative learning, immunity and longevity. Our data suggest MALT1 has an ancient role modulating neural circuit function downstream of IL-17 to remodel physiology and behavior.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
application/pdf, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1184480119
Document Type :
Electronic Resource
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038.s41467-020-15872-y