The adaptor protein CARD9 is required for innate immune responses to intracellular pathogens
Author(s) -
Yen-Michael S. Hsu,
Yongliang Zhang,
Yun You,
Donghai Wang,
Hongxiu Li,
Omar Duramad,
F. XiaoFeng Qin,
Chen Dong,
Xin Lin
Publication year - 2006
Publication title -
nature immunology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 9.074
H-Index - 388
eISSN - 1529-2916
pISSN - 1529-2908
DOI - 10.1038/ni1426
Subject(s) - innate immune system , signal transducing adaptor protein , nod2 , biology , microbiology and biotechnology , intracellular , intracellular parasite , p38 mitogen activated protein kinases , immune system , kinase , transcription factor , signal transduction , protein kinase a , immunology , biochemistry , gene
The caspase-recruitment domain-containing adaptor protein CARD9 regulates the innate signaling responses to fungal infection. Here we show that CARD9 is required for innate immune responses against intracellular pathogens. We generated Card9(-/-) mice and found that CARD9-deficient macrophages had defects in activation of the kinases p38 and Jnk but not of transcription factor NF-kappaB after bacterial and viral infection. CARD9-deficient mice failed to clear infection and showed altered cytokine production after challenge with Listeria monocytogenes. In wild-type cells, we found CARD9 inducibly associated with both the intracellular 'biosensor' Nod2 and the serine-threonine kinase RICK. Our data demonstrate that CARD9 has a critical function in Nod2-mediated activation of p38 and Jnk in innate immune responses to intracellular pathogens.
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