TRUSS, a novel tumor necrosis factor receptor 1 scaffolding protein that mediates activation of the transcription factor NF-κB

SM Soond, JL Terry, JD Colbert… - Molecular and cellular …, 2003 - Am Soc Microbiol
SM Soond, JL Terry, JD Colbert, DWH Riches
Molecular and cellular biology, 2003Am Soc Microbiol
We describe the cloning and characterization of tumor necrosis factor receptor (TNF-R)-
associated ubiquitous scaffolding and signaling protein (TRUSS), a novel TNF-R1-
interacting protein of 90.7 kDa. TRUSS mRNA was ubiquitously expressed in mouse tissues
but was enriched in heart, liver, and testis. Coimmunoprecipitation experiments showed that
TRUSS was constitutively associated with unligated TNF-R1 and that the complex was
relatively insensitive to stimulation with TNF-α. Deletion mutagenesis of TNF-R1 indicated …
Abstract
We describe the cloning and characterization of tumor necrosis factor receptor (TNF-R)-associated ubiquitous scaffolding and signaling protein (TRUSS), a novel TNF-R1-interacting protein of 90.7 kDa. TRUSS mRNA was ubiquitously expressed in mouse tissues but was enriched in heart, liver, and testis. Coimmunoprecipitation experiments showed that TRUSS was constitutively associated with unligated TNF-R1 and that the complex was relatively insensitive to stimulation with TNF-α. Deletion mutagenesis of TNF-R1 indicated that TRUSS interacts with both the membrane-proximal region and the death domain of TNF-R1. In addition, the N-terminal region of TRUSS (residues 1 to 440) contains sequences that permit association with the cytoplasmic domain of TNF-R1. Transient overexpression of TRUSS activated NF-κB and increased NF-κB activation in response to ligation of TNF-R1. In contrast, a COOH-terminal-deletion mutant of TRUSS (TRUSS 1-723) was found to inhibit NF-κB activation by TNF-α. Coprecipitation and coimmunoprecipitation assays revealed that TRUSS can interact with TRADD, TRAF2, and components of the IKK complex. These findings suggest that TRUSS may serve as a scaffolding protein that interacts with TNF-R1 signaling proteins and may link TNF-R1 to the activation of IKK.
American Society for Microbiology