Autoinhibition of dimeric NINJ1 prevents plasma membrane rupture

Lytic cell death culminates in plasma membrane rupture, which releases large intracellular molecules to augment the inflammatory response. Plasma membrane rupture is mediated by the effector membrane protein ninjurin-1 (NINJ1) , which polymerizes and ruptures the membrane via its hydrophilic face ....

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature (London) 2024-10
Hauptverfasser: Pourmal, Sergei, Truong, Melissa E, Johnson, Matthew C, Yang, Ying, Zhou, Lijuan, Alegre, Kamela, Stowe, Irma B, Gupta, Shalini, Chen, Phoebe A, Zhang, Yingnan, Rohou, Alexis, Newton, Kim, Kayagaki, Nobuhiko, Dixit, Vishva M, Deshpande, Ishan
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creator Pourmal, Sergei
Truong, Melissa E
Johnson, Matthew C
Yang, Ying
Zhou, Lijuan
Alegre, Kamela
Stowe, Irma B
Gupta, Shalini
Chen, Phoebe A
Zhang, Yingnan
Rohou, Alexis
Newton, Kim
Kayagaki, Nobuhiko
Dixit, Vishva M
Deshpande, Ishan
description Lytic cell death culminates in plasma membrane rupture, which releases large intracellular molecules to augment the inflammatory response. Plasma membrane rupture is mediated by the effector membrane protein ninjurin-1 (NINJ1) , which polymerizes and ruptures the membrane via its hydrophilic face . How NINJ1 is restrained under steady-state conditions to ensure cell survival remains unknown. Here we describe the molecular underpinnings of NINJ1 inhibition. Using cryogenic electron microscopy, we determined the structure of inactive-state mouse NINJ1 bound to the newly developed nanobody Nb538. Inactive NINJ1 forms a face-to-face homodimer by adopting a three-helix conformation with unkinked transmembrane helix 1 (TM1), in contrast to the four-helix TM1-kinked active conformation . Accordingly, endogenous NINJ1 from primary macrophages is a dimer under steady-state conditions. Inactive dimers sequester the membrane rupture-inducing hydrophilic face of NINJ1 and occlude the binding site for kinked TM1 from neighbouring activated NINJ1 molecules. Mutagenesis studies in cells show that destabilization of inactive face-to-face dimers leads to NINJ1-mediated cell death, whereas stabilization of face-to-face dimers inhibits NINJ1 activity. Moreover, destabilizing mutations prompt spontaneous TM1 kink formation, a hallmark of NINJ1 activation. Collectively, our data demonstrate that dimeric NINJ1 is autoinhibited in trans to prevent unprovoked plasma membrane rupture and cell death.
doi_str_mv 10.1038/s41586-024-08273-4
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Plasma membrane rupture is mediated by the effector membrane protein ninjurin-1 (NINJ1) , which polymerizes and ruptures the membrane via its hydrophilic face . How NINJ1 is restrained under steady-state conditions to ensure cell survival remains unknown. Here we describe the molecular underpinnings of NINJ1 inhibition. Using cryogenic electron microscopy, we determined the structure of inactive-state mouse NINJ1 bound to the newly developed nanobody Nb538. Inactive NINJ1 forms a face-to-face homodimer by adopting a three-helix conformation with unkinked transmembrane helix 1 (TM1), in contrast to the four-helix TM1-kinked active conformation . Accordingly, endogenous NINJ1 from primary macrophages is a dimer under steady-state conditions. Inactive dimers sequester the membrane rupture-inducing hydrophilic face of NINJ1 and occlude the binding site for kinked TM1 from neighbouring activated NINJ1 molecules. Mutagenesis studies in cells show that destabilization of inactive face-to-face dimers leads to NINJ1-mediated cell death, whereas stabilization of face-to-face dimers inhibits NINJ1 activity. Moreover, destabilizing mutations prompt spontaneous TM1 kink formation, a hallmark of NINJ1 activation. Collectively, our data demonstrate that dimeric NINJ1 is autoinhibited in trans to prevent unprovoked plasma membrane rupture and cell death.</description><identifier>ISSN: 0028-0836</identifier><identifier>ISSN: 1476-4687</identifier><identifier>EISSN: 1476-4687</identifier><identifier>DOI: 10.1038/s41586-024-08273-4</identifier><identifier>PMID: 39476863</identifier><language>eng</language><publisher>England</publisher><ispartof>Nature (London), 2024-10</ispartof><rights>2024. The Author(s).</rights><rights>2024. 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title Autoinhibition of dimeric NINJ1 prevents plasma membrane rupture
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