IκBα (Inhibitor of κB alpha)

IκBα is one of the most important members of the IκB protein family — which are inhibitors of the NF-κB pathway, a key regulatory system in inflammation, immunity, and cell survival.


🧬 What Is IκBα?

  • It is a specific isoform of the IκB proteins.
  • Its primary job is to bind NF-κB in the cytoplasm and prevent it from entering the nucleus, thus keeping it inactive under normal conditions.
  • It acts as a “gatekeeper” for the inflammatory response.

🔄 How IκBα Functions in the NF-κB Pathway:

  1. In the resting state, IκBα binds tightly to NF-κB (usually the p65/p50 dimer), masking its nuclear localization signal.
  2. When a cell receives a signal (like stress, infection, cytokines), the IKK complex phosphorylates IκBα at specific serine residues (Ser32 and Ser36).
  3. Phosphorylated IκBα is ubiquitinated and degraded by the proteasome.
  4. This frees NF-κB, allowing it to translocate to the nucleus and activate target genes involved in inflammation, immunity, and survival.
  5. Among those target genes is IκBα itself — creating a negative feedback loop. New IκBα is produced to re-bind and shut down NF-κB, helping prevent overactivation.

🔁 Negative Feedback Loop:

NF-κB → turns on IκBα → IκBα turns off NF-κB

This feedback mechanism ensures that inflammation is tightly controlled and doesn’t become chronic or damaging.


⚠️ Why IκBα Matters:

  • Too little IκBα → unchecked inflammation (seen in chronic disease or cancer)
  • Too much IκBα → impaired immune response (immune suppression)
  • Target for drugs: Modulating IκBα levels is being studied in cancer, autoimmune disorders, and neuroinflammation.

🧠 In Summary:

IκBα is a critical protein that keeps NF-κB “off” until it’s needed. When the body is exposed to stress or infection, IκBα is destroyed, allowing NF-κB to activate survival and inflammation genes — but then IκBα is rebuilt to turn the system back off. It’s a master regulator of controlled inflammation.