| Literature DB >> 34084165 |
Roberto Amadio1,2, Giulia Maria Piperno1, Federica Benvenuti1.
Abstract
Modified or misplaced DNA can be recognized as a danger signal by mammalian cells. Activation of cellular responses to DNA has evolved as a defense mechanism to microbial infections, cellular stress, and tissue damage, yet failure to control this mechanism can lead to autoimmune diseases. Several monogenic and multifactorial autoimmune diseases have been associated with type-I interferons and interferon-stimulated genes (ISGs) induced by deregulated recognition of self-DNA. Hence, understanding how cellular mechanism controls the pathogenic responses to self-nucleic acid has important clinical implications. Fine-tuned membrane trafficking and cellular compartmentalization are two major factors that balance activation of DNA sensors and availability of self-DNA ligands. Intracellular transport and organelle architecture are in turn regulated by cytoskeletal dynamics, yet the precise impact of actin remodeling on DNA sensing remains elusive. This review proposes a critical analysis of the established and hypothetical connections between self-DNA recognition and actin dynamics. As a paradigm of this concept, we discuss recent evidence of deregulated self-DNA sensing in the prototypical actin-related primary immune deficiency (Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome). We anticipate a broader impact of actin-dependent processes on tolerance to self-DNA in autoimmune disorders.Entities:
Keywords: Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome; actin cytoskeleton; cGAS-STING pathway; phagocytes; self-DNA
Year: 2021 PMID: 34084165 PMCID: PMC8167430 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2021.657344
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Figure 1Expression of selected NPFs in immune and non-immune cells. Bar graphs show the relative abundance of the indicated NPF. The “immune cells” plot integrates values from: B cells (bone marrow), Macrophage (bone marrow and spleen) and Classical Monocyte (lung). The “non-immune cells” includes: Epithelial Cell (lung), Fibroblastic Cell (heart), Neuron (brain), Hepatocyte (liver) and Endothelial cell (mammary gland). Plots were obtained by merging expression from different cell types and plotting the resulting average value. Data are from the Tabula Muris website (https://tabula-muris.ds.czbiohub.org/) FACS sorted single cell types RNA-seq.
Figure 2Crosstalk between actin dynamics and cGAS-STING pathway. Left panel: ligand availability into the cytosol may derive from mitochondrial dysfunction (1), nuclear damage (2), endolysosomal leakage (3). The actin cytoskeleton controls both morphology and stability of these compartments, as discussed in the text. Right panel: the scheme depicts STING trafficking steps highlighting the processes controlled by actin dynamics. NPFs of the WASp family regulate vesicles budding from the ER, cargo loading onto COPII vesicles, Golgi stability and post-Golgi trafficking steps, including incorporation into autophagosomes and phagolysosomes.