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Serine/Threonine Acetylation Of Tgfbeta-Activated Kinase (Tak1) By Yersinia Pestis Yopj Inhibits Innate Immune Signaling, Nicholas Paul Paquette, Joseph E. Conlon, Charles R. Sweet, Florentina Rus, Lindsay Wilson, Andrea J. Pereira, Charles V. Rosadini, Nadege Goutagny, Alexander N. R. Weber, William S. Lane, Scott A. Shaffer, Stephanie Maniatis, Katherine A. Fitzgerald, Lynda M. Stuart, Neal S. Silverman
Serine/Threonine Acetylation Of Tgfbeta-Activated Kinase (Tak1) By Yersinia Pestis Yopj Inhibits Innate Immune Signaling, Nicholas Paul Paquette, Joseph E. Conlon, Charles R. Sweet, Florentina Rus, Lindsay Wilson, Andrea J. Pereira, Charles V. Rosadini, Nadege Goutagny, Alexander N. R. Weber, William S. Lane, Scott A. Shaffer, Stephanie Maniatis, Katherine A. Fitzgerald, Lynda M. Stuart, Neal S. Silverman
Katherine A. Fitzgerald
The Gram-negative bacteria Yersinia pestis, causative agent of plague, is extremely virulent. One mechanism contributing to Y. pestis virulence is the presence of a type-three secretion system, which injects effector proteins, Yops, directly into immune cells of the infected host. One of these Yop proteins, YopJ, is proapoptotic and inhibits mammalian NF-kappaB and MAP-kinase signal transduction pathways. Although the molecular mechanism remained elusive for some time, recent work has shown that YopJ acts as a serine/threonine acetyl-transferase targeting MAP2 kinases. Using Drosophila as a model system, we find that YopJ inhibits one innate immune NF-kappaB signaling pathway (IMD) but not …