Cell Reports
Volume 9, Issue 1, 9 October 2014, Pages 153-165
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Article
HOIP Deficiency Causes Embryonic Lethality by Aberrant TNFR1-Mediated Endothelial Cell Death

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.celrep.2014.08.066Get rights and content
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open access

Highlights

  • Genetic ablation of HOIP results in embryonic lethality at midgestation (E10.5)

  • Conditional HOIP deletion in the endothelium is sufficient to cause embryonic death

  • Defective yolk sac vascularization is causative for embryonic lethality at E10.5

  • Aberrant TNFR1-mediated cell death is the cause of defective vascularization

Summary

Linear ubiquitination is crucial for innate and adaptive immunity. The linear ubiquitin chain assembly complex (LUBAC), consisting of HOIL-1, HOIP, and SHARPIN, is the only known ubiquitin ligase that generates linear ubiquitin linkages. HOIP is the catalytically active LUBAC component. Here, we show that both constitutive and Tie2-Cre-driven HOIP deletion lead to aberrant endothelial cell death, resulting in defective vascularization and embryonic lethality at midgestation. Ablation of tumor necrosis factor receptor 1 (TNFR1) prevents cell death, vascularization defects, and death at midgestation. HOIP-deficient cells are more sensitive to death induction by both tumor necrosis factor (TNF) and lymphotoxin-α (LT-α), and aberrant complex-II formation is responsible for sensitization to TNFR1-mediated cell death in the absence of HOIP. Finally, we show that HOIP’s catalytic activity is necessary for preventing TNF-induced cell death. Hence, LUBAC and its linear-ubiquitin-forming activity are required for maintaining vascular integrity during embryogenesis by preventing TNFR1-mediated endothelial cell death.

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This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/).

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Co-first author