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Regulated IRE1-dependent mRNA decay sets the threshold for dendritic cell survival.

Nature cell biology (2017-05-02)
Simon J Tavernier, Fabiola Osorio, Lana Vandersarren, Jessica Vetters, Nele Vanlangenakker, Gert Van Isterdael, Karl Vergote, Riet De Rycke, Eef Parthoens, Lianne van de Laar, Takao Iwawaki, Juan R Del Valle, Chih-Chi Andrew Hu, Bart N Lambrecht, Sophie Janssens
RESUMEN

The IRE1-XBP1 signalling pathway is part of a cellular programme that protects against endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress, but also controls development and survival of immune cells. Loss of XBP1 in splenic type 1 conventional dendritic cells (cDC1s) results in functional alterations without affecting cell survival. However, in mucosal cDC1s, loss of XBP1 impaired survival in a tissue-specific manner-while lung cDC1s die, intestinal cDC1s survive. This was not caused by differential activation of ER stress cell-death regulators CHOP or JNK. Rather, survival of intestinal cDC1s was associated with their ability to shut down protein synthesis through a protective integrated stress response and their marked increase in regulated IRE1-dependent messenger RNA decay. Furthermore, loss of IRE1 endonuclease on top of XBP1 led to cDC1 loss in the intestine. Thus, mucosal DCs differentially mount ATF4- and IRE1-dependent adaptive mechanisms to survive in the face of ER stress.

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Tunicamycin from Streptomyces sp.