NIK overexpression amplifies, whereas ablation of its TRAF3-binding domain replaces BAFF:BAFF-R-mediated survival signals in B cells

Yoshiteru Sasaki(Harvard University), Dinis Pedro Calado(Harvard University), Emmanuel Derudder(Harvard University), Baochun Zhang(Harvard University), Yuri Shimizu, Fabienne Mackay(Garvan Institute of Medical Research), Shin‐Ichi Nishikawa, Klaus Rajewsky(Harvard University), Marc Schmidt‐Supprian(Harvard University)
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
July 29, 2008
Cited by 103Open Access
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Abstract

BAFF-R-dependent activation of the alternative NF-kappaB pathway plays an essential role in mature B cell survival. Mutations leading to overexpression of NIK and deletion of the TRAF3 gene are implicated in human multiple myeloma. We show that overexpression of NIK in mouse B lymphocytes amplifies alternative NF-kappaB activation and peripheral B cell numbers in a BAFF-R-dependent manner, whereas uncoupling NIK from TRAF3-mediated control causes maximal p100 processing and dramatic hyperplasia of BAFF-R-independent B cells. NIK controls alternative NF-kappaB signaling by increasing the protein levels of its negative regulator TRAF3 in a dose-dependent fashion. This mechanism keeps NIK protein levels below detection even when they cause B cell hyperplasia, so that contributions of NIK to B cell pathologies can easily be overlooked.


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