Publication | Open Access
Serum enzyme studies in muscle disease: Part II Serum creatine kinase activity in muscular dystrophy and in other myopathic and neuropathic disorders
85
Citations
12
References
1964
Year
Serum Enzyme StudiesMuscle FunctionMolecular BiologyMitochondrial BiologyInnate ImmunityOxidative StressMitochondrial MyopathyMuscle InjurySkeletal MuscleTnf-induced StabilizationNeuropathologyCell SignalingMolecular SignalingMuscle PathologyM1-ubiquitin-specific Deubiquitinase OtulinBiochemistryMitochondrial DynamicNeuromuscular PathologyCell BiologyNeuromuscular DisordersMuscle DiseaseSignal TransductionMitochondrial FunctionImmune Cell DevelopmentNatural SciencesPhysiologyDegenerative DiseaseMitochondrial BioenergeticsMetabolismMedicineSignal AmplificationNeuromusculoskeletal Disorder
<h3>SUMMARY</h3> Mitochondria are increasingly recognized as cellular hubs to orchestrate signaling pathways that regulate metabolism, redox homeostasis, and cell fate decisions. Recent research revealed a role of mitochondria also in innate immune signaling, however, the mechanisms of how mitochondria affect signal transduction are poorly understood. Here we show that the NF-ĸB pathway activated by TNF employs mitochondria as a platform for signal amplification and shuttling of activated NF-ĸB to the nucleus. TNF induces the recruitment of HOIP, the catalytic component of the linear ubiquitin chain assembly complex (LUBAC), and its substrate NEMO to the outer mitochondrial membrane, where M1- and K63-linked ubiquitin chains are generated. NF-ĸB is locally activated and transported to the nucleus by mitochondria, resulting in an increase in mitochondria-nucleus contact sites in a HOIP-dependent manner. Notably, TNF-induced stabilization of the mitochondrial kinase PINK1 contributes to signal amplification by antagonizing the M1-ubiquitin-specific deubiquitinase OTULIN.
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