4.8 Article

Protein Kinase D Is an Essential Regulator of C. elegans Innate Immunity

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IMMUNITY
卷 30, 期 4, 页码 521-532

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CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.immuni.2009.03.007

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  1. NIH [GM080615]

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Protein kinase D (PKD) mediates signal transduction downstream from phospholipase C and diacylglycerol (DAG). PKDs are activated by hormones and stress in cell lines, but little is known about PKD functions and regulation in vivo. Here, we show that DKF-2, a C. elegans PKD, regulates innate immunity. Animals lacking DKF-2 were hypersensitive to killing by bacteria that are pathogens of C. elegans and humans. DKF-2 induced 85 mRNAs, which encode antimicrobial peptides and proteins that sustain intestinal epithelium. Induction of immune effector mRNAs by DKF-2 proceeded via PMK-1 (p38 Mapkinase)-dependent and -independent pathways. TPA-1, a PKC delta homolog, regulated activation and functions of DKF-2 in vivo. Therefore, DKF-2 provides a molecular link that couples DAG signaling to regulation of immunity. This intersection between DAG-TPA-1-DKF-2 and PMK-1 pathways enables integrated immune responses to multiple stimuli. Thus, a PKD mobilizes activation of host immune defenses against pathogens by previously unappreciated signaling pathways and mechanisms.

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