Page not found.

Loading Pathway...
Error: Pathway image not found.
Hide
Pathway Description
Toll-Like Receptor Pathway 2
Rattus norvegicus
Category:
Protein Pathway
Sub-Categories:
Immunological
Pathogen-Activated Signaling
Gene Regulatory
Cellular Response
Created: 2018-09-20
Last Updated: 2019-08-16
Toll-like receptors (TLRs) are a type of pattern recognition receptor that spans the cell membrane and recognizes conserved microbial molecules. TLRs get their name from the toll gene in Drosophila, which produces a protein that is similar in structure to TLR proteins. Each TLR is able to recognize specific unique molecules associated with pathogens, including lipoproteins, lipopolysaccharides, double stranded RNA, flagellin and others. Recognition of pathogen molecules allows the immune system to detect extracellular pathogens.
TLR2 can form heterodimers on the surface of the cell's plasma membrane with either TLR1 or TLR6. These dimers, along with another protein known as CD14 as a cofactor, can detect different microbial lipoproteins. Following binding of lipoproteins to these complexes, they activate a protein known as myeloid differentiation primary response protein (MyD88). MyD88 then joins with interleukin-1 receptor-associated kinase 1 (IRAK1) to form a complex.
TLR4 is another TLR that detects lipopolysaccharides (LPS) that make up the outer membrane of Gram-negative bacteria. It associates with two other proteins, monocyte differentiation antigen CD14, and lymphocyte antigen 96 (MD2), which allow it to better bind LPS. Once LPS has bound to the complex, it activates signalling to the toll/interleukin-1 receptor domain-containing adaptor protein (TIRAP) and Toll-interacting protein (TOLLIP), which then recruit MyD99 and IRAK1 to the TLR on the cell surface.
Other TLRs have slightly more simple pathways, including TLR9, which recognizes CpG-DNA, which is a section of DNA with a cytosine followed by a guanine and are found commonly in pathogen genomes. TLRs 3 and 8 both recognize double stranded RNA, which is found in some viruses. TLR7 recognizes single stranded RNA from internalized viral genomes, and can also be activated by the drug Imiquimod, sold as Aldara. Imiquimod is used to treat genital warts , actinic keratosis and basal cell carcinoma by activating the immune system in the area it was applied. Finally, TLR5 recognizes the bacterial flagellin proteins. When any of these substances bind their respective TLRs, the TLRs signal to the MyD88 and IRAK1 complex.
After any of these activation mechanisms occurs, the IRAK protein, which is a kinase, phosphorylates and activates TNF receptor-associated factor 6 (TRAF6). TRAF6 then interacts with the evolutionarily conserved signaling intermediate in Toll pathway (ECSIT). ECSIT then activates mitogen-activated protein kinase kinase kinase 1 (MAP3K1). This then phosphorylates the IKK complex, comprised of inhibitors of nuclear factor kappa-B kinase subunits alpha and beta (IKKA and IKKB), as well as its regulatory subunit, NF-kappa-B essential modulator (NEMO).
Another pathway starting with the activation of TRAF6 leads to this same point. First, TRAF6 activates a complex consisting of mitogen-activated protein kinase kinase kinase 7 (MAP3K7), as well as TGF-beta-activated kinase 1 (TAK1) and MAP3K7-binding proteins 1, 2 and 3. This complex can then activate dual specificity mitogen-activated protein kinase kinase 4 (MAP2K4), which then phosphorylates mitogen-activated protein kinase 8 (MAPK8) in the cell nucleus. Alternately, the TAK1 and MAP3K7-binding complex can phosphorylate and activate mitogen-activated protein kinase 14 (MAPK14), which then phosphorylates the IKK complex.
NF-kappa-B is a transcription factor that is inhibited by NF-kappa-B inhibitor alpha, which binds to it and blocks its nuclear localization sequence, holding it in the cytoplasm rather than allowing it to enter the nucleus and transcribe the DNA. However, the IKK complex is able to phosphorylate the inhibitor, removing it and allowing nuclear factor NF-kappa-B p105 subunit and transcription factor p65 to enter the nucleus to transcribe DNA and allow the appropriate immune response for the stimulus to be activated.
References
Toll-Like Receptor Pathway 2 References
Hamil KG, Hall SH: Cloning of rat Sertoli cell follicle-stimulating hormone primary response complementary deoxyribonucleic acid: regulation of TSC-22 gene expression. Endocrinology. 1994 Mar;134(3):1205-12. doi: 10.1210/endo.134.3.8161377.
Pubmed: 8161377
Lundby A, Secher A, Lage K, Nordsborg NB, Dmytriyev A, Lundby C, Olsen JV: Quantitative maps of protein phosphorylation sites across 14 different rat organs and tissues. Nat Commun. 2012 Jun 6;3:876. doi: 10.1038/ncomms1871.
Pubmed: 22673903
Gerhard DS, Wagner L, Feingold EA, Shenmen CM, Grouse LH, Schuler G, Klein SL, Old S, Rasooly R, Good P, Guyer M, Peck AM, Derge JG, Lipman D, Collins FS, Jang W, Sherry S, Feolo M, Misquitta L, Lee E, Rotmistrovsky K, Greenhut SF, Schaefer CF, Buetow K, Bonner TI, Haussler D, Kent J, Kiekhaus M, Furey T, Brent M, Prange C, Schreiber K, Shapiro N, Bhat NK, Hopkins RF, Hsie F, Driscoll T, Soares MB, Casavant TL, Scheetz TE, Brown-stein MJ, Usdin TB, Toshiyuki S, Carninci P, Piao Y, Dudekula DB, Ko MS, Kawakami K, Suzuki Y, Sugano S, Gruber CE, Smith MR, Simmons B, Moore T, Waterman R, Johnson SL, Ruan Y, Wei CL, Mathavan S, Gunaratne PH, Wu J, Garcia AM, Hulyk SW, Fuh E, Yuan Y, Sneed A, Kowis C, Hodgson A, Muzny DM, McPherson J, Gibbs RA, Fahey J, Helton E, Ketteman M, Madan A, Rodrigues S, Sanchez A, Whiting M, Madari A, Young AC, Wetherby KD, Granite SJ, Kwong PN, Brinkley CP, Pearson RL, Bouffard GG, Blakesly RW, Green ED, Dickson MC, Rodriguez AC, Grimwood J, Schmutz J, Myers RM, Butterfield YS, Griffith M, Griffith OL, Krzywinski MI, Liao N, Morin R, Palmquist D, Petrescu AS, Skalska U, Smailus DE, Stott JM, Schnerch A, Schein JE, Jones SJ, Holt RA, Baross A, Marra MA, Clifton S, Makowski KA, Bosak S, Malek J: The status, quality, and expansion of the NIH full-length cDNA project: the Mammalian Gene Collection (MGC). Genome Res. 2004 Oct;14(10B):2121-7. doi: 10.1101/gr.2596504.
Pubmed: 15489334
Gibbs RA, Weinstock GM, Metzker ML, Muzny DM, Sodergren EJ, Scherer S, Scott G, Steffen D, Worley KC, Burch PE, Okwuonu G, Hines S, Lewis L, DeRamo C, Delgado O, Dugan-Rocha S, Miner G, Morgan M, Hawes A, Gill R, Celera, Holt RA, Adams MD, Amanatides PG, Baden-Tillson H, Barnstead M, Chin S, Evans CA, Ferriera S, Fosler C, Glodek A, Gu Z, Jennings D, Kraft CL, Nguyen T, Pfannkoch CM, Sitter C, Sutton GG, Venter JC, Woodage T, Smith D, Lee HM, Gustafson E, Cahill P, Kana A, Doucette-Stamm L, Weinstock K, Fechtel K, Weiss RB, Dunn DM, Green ED, Blakesley RW, Bouffard GG, De Jong PJ, Osoegawa K, Zhu B, Marra M, Schein J, Bosdet I, Fjell C, Jones S, Krzywinski M, Mathewson C, Siddiqui A, Wye N, McPherson J, Zhao S, Fraser CM, Shetty J, Shatsman S, Geer K, Chen Y, Abramzon S, Nierman WC, Havlak PH, Chen R, Durbin KJ, Egan A, Ren Y, Song XZ, Li B, Liu Y, Qin X, Cawley S, Worley KC, Cooney AJ, D'Souza LM, Martin K, Wu JQ, Gonzalez-Garay ML, Jackson AR, Kalafus KJ, McLeod MP, Milosavljevic A, Virk D, Volkov A, Wheeler DA, Zhang Z, Bailey JA, Eichler EE, Tuzun E, Birney E, Mongin E, Ureta-Vidal A, Woodwark C, Zdobnov E, Bork P, Suyama M, Torrents D, Alexandersson M, Trask BJ, Young JM, Huang H, Wang H, Xing H, Daniels S, Gietzen D, Schmidt J, Stevens K, Vitt U, Wingrove J, Camara F, Mar Alba M, Abril JF, Guigo R, Smit A, Dubchak I, Rubin EM, Couronne O, Poliakov A, Hubner N, Ganten D, Goesele C, Hummel O, Kreitler T, Lee YA, Monti J, Schulz H, Zimdahl H, Himmelbauer H, Lehrach H, Jacob HJ, Bromberg S, Gullings-Handley J, Jensen-Seaman MI, Kwitek AE, Lazar J, Pasko D, Tonellato PJ, Twigger S, Ponting CP, Duarte JM, Rice S, Goodstadt L, Beatson SA, Emes RD, Winter EE, Webber C, Brandt P, Nyakatura G, Adetobi M, Chiaromonte F, Elnitski L, Eswara P, Hardison RC, Hou M, Kolbe D, Makova K, Miller W, Nekrutenko A, Riemer C, Schwartz S, Taylor J, Yang S, Zhang Y, Lindpaintner K, Andrews TD, Caccamo M, Clamp M, Clarke L, Curwen V, Durbin R, Eyras E, Searle SM, Cooper GM, Batzoglou S, Brudno M, Sidow A, Stone EA, Venter JC, Payseur BA, Bourque G, Lopez-Otin C, Puente XS, Chakrabarti K, Chatterji S, Dewey C, Pachter L, Bray N, Yap VB, Caspi A, Tesler G, Pevzner PA, Haussler D, Roskin KM, Baertsch R, Clawson H, Furey TS, Hinrichs AS, Karolchik D, Kent WJ, Rosenbloom KR, Trumbower H, Weirauch M, Cooper DN, Stenson PD, Ma B, Brent M, Arumugam M, Shteynberg D, Copley RR, Taylor MS, Riethman H, Mudunuri U, Peterson J, Guyer M, Felsenfeld A, Old S, Mockrin S, Collins F: Genome sequence of the Brown Norway rat yields insights into mammalian evolution. Nature. 2004 Apr 1;428(6982):493-521. doi: 10.1038/nature02426.
Pubmed: 15057822
Florea L, Di Francesco V, Miller J, Turner R, Yao A, Harris M, Walenz B, Mobarry C, Merkulov GV, Charlab R, Dew I, Deng Z, Istrail S, Li P, Sutton G: Gene and alternative splicing annotation with AIR. Genome Res. 2005 Jan;15(1):54-66. doi: 10.1101/gr.2889405.
Pubmed: 15632090
Tewari M, Mohn KL, Yue FE, Taub R: Sequence of rat RL/IF-1 encoding an IkappaB, and comparison with related proteins containing notch-like repeats [corrected]. Nucleic Acids Res. 1992 Feb 11;20(3):607. doi: 10.1093/nar/20.3.607.
Pubmed: 1741294
Tewari M, Dobrzanski P, Mohn KL, Cressman DE, Hsu JC, Bravo R, Taub R: Rapid induction in regenerating liver of RL/IF-1 (an I kappa B that inhibits NF-kappa B, RelB-p50, and c-Rel-p50) and PHF, a novel kappa B site-binding complex. Mol Cell Biol. 1992 Jun;12(6):2898-908. doi: 10.1128/mcb.12.6.2898.
Pubmed: 1588976
Galea E, Reis DJ, Fox ES, Xu H, Feinstein DL: CD14 mediate endotoxin induction of nitric oxide synthase in cultured brain glial cells. J Neuroimmunol. 1996 Jan;64(1):19-28. doi: 10.1016/0165-5728(95)00143-3.
Pubmed: 8598386
Takai N, Kataoka M, Higuchi Y, Matsuura K, Yamamoto S: Primary structure of rat CD14 and characteristics of rat CD14, cytokine, and NO synthase mRNA expression in mononuclear phagocyte system cells in response to LPS. J Leukoc Biol. 1997 Jun;61(6):736-44. doi: 10.1002/jlb.61.6.736.
Pubmed: 9201265
Liu S, Khemlani LS, Shapiro RA, Johnson ML, Liu K, Geller DA, Watkins SC, Goyert SM, Billiar TR: Expression of CD14 by hepatocytes: upregulation by cytokines during endotoxemia. Infect Immun. 1998 Nov;66(11):5089-98.
Pubmed: 9784508
Frantz S, Kobzik L, Kim YD, Fukazawa R, Medzhitov R, Lee RT, Kelly RA: Toll4 (TLR4) expression in cardiac myocytes in normal and failing myocardium. J Clin Invest. 1999 Aug;104(3):271-80. doi: 10.1172/JCI6709.
Pubmed: 10430608
This pathway was propagated using PathWhiz -
Pon, A. et al. Pathways with PathWhiz (2015) Nucleic Acids Res. 43(Web Server issue): W552–W559.
Propagated from SMP0069593
Highlighted elements will appear in red.
Highlight Compounds
Highlight Proteins
Enter relative concentration values (without units). Elements will be highlighted in a color gradient where red = lowest concentration and green = highest concentration. For the best results, view the pathway in Black and White.
Visualize Compound Data
Visualize Protein Data
Downloads
Settings