| Literature DB >> 29546673 |
Meiguang Xiong1, Suyun Wang1, Yan-Yi Wang1, Yong Ran2.
Abstract
The cGAS-MITA pathway of cytosolic DNA sensing plays essential roles in immune response against pathogens that contain DNA or with DNA production in their life cycles. The cGAS-MITA pathway also detects leaked or aberrant accumulated self DNA in the cytoplasm under certain pathological conditions, such as virus induced cell death, DNA damage, mitochondria damage, gene mutations, which results in autoimmune diseases. Therefore, the cGAS-MITA pathway must be tightly controlled to ensure proper immune response against pathogens and to avoid autoimmune diseases. The regulation of cGAS-MITA pathway at MITA-level have been extensively explored and reviewed elsewhere, here we provide a summary and perspective on recent advances in understanding of the cGAS regulation.Entities:
Keywords: Autoimmune; DNA sensing; Regulation; cGAS
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29546673 PMCID: PMC5934468 DOI: 10.1007/s12250-018-0005-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Virol Sin ISSN: 1995-820X Impact factor: 4.327
Fig. 1Schematic regulating network of cGAS. Detailed regulating proteins and virus antagonist of cGAS are depicted. Upon DNA binding to cGAS, cGAMP is synthesized by cGAS from ATP and GTP. Then binding of cGAMP to the adapter MITA induces conformational changes of MITA homodimer, leading to production of cytokines including type I interferons. Green arrows indicate positive regulators of the corresponding process. Red arrows indicate negative regulators of the corresponding process. Upon inflammasome activation, caspase-1 inhibits the cGAS-MITA pathway by cleavage of cGAS. DENV NS2B protein promotes the autophagy–lysosome-dependent degradation of cGAS. TRIM14 and USP14 inhibit the degradation of cGAS by cleaving K48-linked ubiquitin chains of cGAS. Beclin-1 promotes the autophagic degradation of cGAS. CCP5/6, TRIM38, SENP7 and RNF185 promote the activity of cGAS by deglutamylation, SUMOylation, deSUMOylation, ubiquitination of cGAS, respectively. TTLL4, TTLL6 and Akt inhibit the activation of cGAS by monoglutamylation, polyglutamylation, phosphorylation of cGAS, respectively. LANA of KSHV interacts and antagonizes cGAS. ORF52 of KSHV interacts with cGAS and inhibits the enzymatic activity of cGAS.
Important regulation sites of cGAS.
| Sites | PTMs | Regulators for PTMs | Proposed mechanism | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| K414 | K48-Linked ubiquitination | E3 ligase unknown | Enhancing the degradation of cGAS by promoting cGAS-p62 interaction | Chen |
| Deubiquitination | TRIM14-USP14 | Deubiquitination of cGAS | ||
| K173/384 | K27-linked ubiquitination | RNF185 | Potentiating the catalytic activity of cGAS | Wang |
| E302 | Monoglutamylation | TTLL4 | Inhibiting the synthase activity of cGAS | Xia |
| Deglutamylation | CCP5 | Deglutamylation of cGAS | ||
| E272 | Polyglutamylation | TTLL6 | Inhibiting the binding between cGAS and DNA | |
| Deglutamylation | CCP6 | Deglutamylation of cGAS | ||
| K217/464 | SUMOylation | TRIM38 | Enhancing the stability of cGAS | Hu |
| DeSUMOylation | SENP2 | DeSUMOylation of cGAS | ||
| K335/372/382 | SUMOylation | Unknown | Inhibiting the activity of cGAS | Cui |
| DeSUMOylation | SENP7 | Potentiating the activity of cGAS | ||
| S305 | Phosphorylation | Akt | Suppressing the enzymatic activity of cGAS | Seo |
| D140/D157 | Cleavage | Caspase-1 | Degradation of cGAS | Wang |
| Unknown | Cleavage | Caspase-4/5/11 | Degradation of cGAS | Wang |