Histone deacetylase 3 promotes innate antiviral immunity through deacetylation of TBK1

Jielin Tang(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Qi Yang(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Chonghui Xu(Chinese Academy of Sciences), He Zhao(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Yaling Liu(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Can-yu Liu(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Yuan Zhou(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Dong-wei Gai(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Rongjuan Pei(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Yun Wang(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Xue Hu(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Bo Zhong(Wuhan University), Yan‐Yi Wang(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Xinwen Chen(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Jizheng Chen(Chinese Academy of Sciences)
Protein & Cell
August 9, 2020
Cited by 37Open Access
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Abstract

TANK-binding kinase 1 (TBK1), a core kinase of antiviral pathways, activates the production of interferons (IFNs). It has been reported that deacetylation activates TBK1; however, the precise mechanism still remains to be uncovered. We show here that during the early stage of viral infection, the acetylation of TBK1 was increased, and the acetylation of TBK1 at Lys241 enhanced the recruitment of IRF3 to TBK1. HDAC3 directly deacetylated TBK1 at Lys241 and Lys692, which resulted in the activation of TBK1. Deacetylation at Lys241 and Lys692 was critical for the kinase activity and dimerization of TBK1 respectively. Using knockout cell lines and transgenic mice, we confirmed that a HDAC3 null mutant exhibited enhanced susceptibility to viral challenge via impaired production of type I IFNs. Furthermore, activated TBK1 phosphorylated HDAC3, which promoted the deacetylation activity of HDAC3 and formed a feedback loop. In this study, we illustrated the roles the acetylated and deacetylated forms of TBK1 play in antiviral innate responses and clarified the post-translational modulations involved in the interaction between TBK1 and HDAC3.


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