CARD19, the protein formerly known as BinCARD, is a mitochondrial protein that does not regulate Bcl10-dependent NF-κB activation after TCR engagement

Kariana E. Rios, Anuj K. Kashyap, Sean K. Maynard, Michael Washington, Suman Paul, Brian C. Schaefer*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

4 Scopus citations

Abstract

After T cell receptor (TCR) engagement, the CARD11-Bcl10-Malt1 (CBM) complex oligomerizes to transduce NF-κB activating signals. Bcl10 is then degraded to limit NF-κB activation. The cDNA AK057716 (BinCARD-1) was reported to encode a novel CARD protein that interacts with Bcl10 and modestly inhibits NF-κB activation. In a later study, a second isoform, BinCARD-2, was identified. Here, we report that the cDNA AK057716 (BinCARD-1) is an incompletely spliced derivative of the gene product of C9orf89, whereas CARD19 (BinCARD-2) represents the properly spliced isoform, with conservation across diverse species. Immunoblotting revealed expression of CARD19 in T cells, but no evidence of BinCARD-1 expression, and microscopy demonstrated that endogenous CARD19 localizes to mitochondria. Although we confirmed that both BinCARD-1 and CARD19 can inhibit NF-κB activation and promote Bcl10 degradation when transiently overexpressed in HEK293T cells, loss of endogenous CARD19 expression had little effect on Bcl10-dependent NF-κB activation, activation of Malt1 protease function, or Bcl10 degradation after TCR engagement in primary murine CD8 T cells. Together, these data indicate that the only detectable translated product of C9orf89 is the mitochondrial protein CARD19, which does not play a discernible role in TCR-dependent, Bcl10-mediated signal transduction to Malt1 or NF-κB.

Original languageEnglish
Article number104179
JournalCellular Immunology
Volume356
DOIs
StatePublished - Oct 2020
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Bcl10
  • BinCARD
  • CARD proteins
  • CARD19
  • CBM complex
  • NF-κB
  • T cell receptor
  • T cell signaling

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