Immunity
Volume 36, Issue 3, 23 March 2012, Pages 337-347
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Article
Structure and Functional Characterization of the RNA-Binding Element of the NLRX1 Innate Immune Modulator

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Summary

Mitochondrial NLRX1 is a member of the family of nucleotide-binding domain and leucine-rich-repeat-containing proteins (NLRs) that mediate host innate immunity as intracellular surveillance sensors against common molecular patterns of invading pathogens. NLRX1 functions in antiviral immunity, but the molecular mechanism of its ligand-induced activation is largely unknown. The crystal structure of the C-terminal fragment (residues 629–975) of human NLRX1 (cNLRX1) at 2.65 Å resolution reveals that cNLRX1 consists of an N-terminal helical (LRRNT) domain, central leucine-rich repeat modules (LRRM), and a C-terminal three-helix bundle (LRRCT). cNLRX1 assembles into a compact hexameric architecture that is stabilized by intersubunit and interdomain interactions of LRRNT and LRRCT in the trimer and dimer components of the hexamer, respectively. Furthermore, we find that cNLRX1 interacts directly with RNA and supports a role for NLRX1 in recognition of intracellular viral RNA in antiviral immunity.

Highlights

► The C-terminal fragment of NLRX1 (cNLRX1) assembles into a hexamer ► cNLRX1 hexamerization occurs through trimerization of three dimers ► The N- and C-terminal caps of cNLRX1 play key roles in its hexamerization ► cNLRX1 can directly interact with RNA

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Present address: Department of Systems Immunology, College of Biomedical Science, Kangwon National University, Chuncheon 200-701, Republic of Korea