| Literature DB >> 27066000 |
Gayane Manukyan1, Rustam Aminov2.
Abstract
Mutations in the MEFV gene, which encodes the protein named pyrin (also called marenostrin or TRIM20), are associated with the autoinflammatory disease familial Mediterranean fever (FMF). Recent genetic and immunologic studies uncovered novel functions of pyrin and raised several new questions in relation to FMF pathogenesis. The disease is clinically heterogeneous reflecting the complexity and multiplicity of pyrin functions. The main functions uncovered so far include its involvement in innate immune response such as the inflammasome assemblage and, as a part of the inflammasome, sensing intracellular danger signals, activation of mediators of inflammation, and resolution of inflammation by the autophagy of regulators of innate immunity. Based on these functions, the FMF-associated versions of pyrin confer a heightened sensitivity to a variety of intracellular danger signals and postpone the resolution of innate immune responses. It remains to be demonstrated, however, what kind of selective advantage the heterozygous carriage conferred in the past to be positively selected and maintained in populations from the Mediterranean basin.Entities:
Keywords: autoinflammation; cytoskeleton; familial Mediterranean fever; innate immunity; pyrin
Year: 2016 PMID: 27066000 PMCID: PMC4815028 DOI: 10.3389/fmicb.2016.00456
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Microbiol ISSN: 1664-302X Impact factor: 5.640
Structural and functional roles of pyrin in cellular processes.
| Role | Reference |
|---|---|
| Inflammasome assembly | |
| Sensing intracellular danger signals by the inflammasome (aberrant actin depolymerisation, protein modification by bacterial toxins) | |
| Activation of mediators of inflammation by the inflammasome (IL-1β, IL-18) | |
| Pyrin-cytoskeloton interactions | |
| Apoptosis | |
| Autophagy of innate immunity regulators | |