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Suppression of STING Signaling through Epigenetic Silencing and Missense Mutation Impedes DNA-Damage Mediated Cytokine Production

The production of cytokines in response to DNA damage events may be an important host defense response to help prevent the escape of pre-cancerous cells. The innate immune pathways involved in these events are known to be regulated by cellular molecules such as STING (stimulator of interferon genes)...

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Autores principales: Konno, Hiroyasu, Yamauchi, Shota, Berglund, Anders, Putney, Ryan M., Mulé, James J., Barber, Glen N.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6029885/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29367762
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41388-017-0120-0
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author Konno, Hiroyasu
Yamauchi, Shota
Berglund, Anders
Putney, Ryan M.
Mulé, James J.
Barber, Glen N.
author_facet Konno, Hiroyasu
Yamauchi, Shota
Berglund, Anders
Putney, Ryan M.
Mulé, James J.
Barber, Glen N.
author_sort Konno, Hiroyasu
collection PubMed
description The production of cytokines in response to DNA damage events may be an important host defense response to help prevent the escape of pre-cancerous cells. The innate immune pathways involved in these events are known to be regulated by cellular molecules such as STING (stimulator of interferon genes), which controls type I interferon and pro-inflammatory cytokine production in response to the presence of microbial DNA or cytosolic DNA that has escaped from the nucleus. STING signaling has been shown to be defective in a variety of cancers, such as colon cancer and melanoma, actions which may enable damaged cells to escape the immunosurveillance system. Here, we report through examination of databases that STING signaling may be commonly suppressed in a greater variety of tumors due to loss-of-function mutation or epigenetic silencing of the STING/cGAS promoter regions. In comparison, RNA activated innate immune pathways controlled by RIG-I/MDA5 were significantly less affected. Examination of reported missense STING variants confirmed that many exhibited a loss of function phenotype and could not activate cytokine production following exposure to cytosolic DNA or DNA-damage events. Our data implies that the STING signaling pathway may be recurrently suppressed by a number of mechanisms in a considerable variety of malignant disease and be a requirement for cellular transformation.
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spelling pubmed-60298852018-07-25 Suppression of STING Signaling through Epigenetic Silencing and Missense Mutation Impedes DNA-Damage Mediated Cytokine Production Konno, Hiroyasu Yamauchi, Shota Berglund, Anders Putney, Ryan M. Mulé, James J. Barber, Glen N. Oncogene Article The production of cytokines in response to DNA damage events may be an important host defense response to help prevent the escape of pre-cancerous cells. The innate immune pathways involved in these events are known to be regulated by cellular molecules such as STING (stimulator of interferon genes), which controls type I interferon and pro-inflammatory cytokine production in response to the presence of microbial DNA or cytosolic DNA that has escaped from the nucleus. STING signaling has been shown to be defective in a variety of cancers, such as colon cancer and melanoma, actions which may enable damaged cells to escape the immunosurveillance system. Here, we report through examination of databases that STING signaling may be commonly suppressed in a greater variety of tumors due to loss-of-function mutation or epigenetic silencing of the STING/cGAS promoter regions. In comparison, RNA activated innate immune pathways controlled by RIG-I/MDA5 were significantly less affected. Examination of reported missense STING variants confirmed that many exhibited a loss of function phenotype and could not activate cytokine production following exposure to cytosolic DNA or DNA-damage events. Our data implies that the STING signaling pathway may be recurrently suppressed by a number of mechanisms in a considerable variety of malignant disease and be a requirement for cellular transformation. 2018-01-25 2018-04 /pmc/articles/PMC6029885/ /pubmed/29367762 http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41388-017-0120-0 Text en Users may view, print, copy, and download text and data-mine the content in such documents, for the purposes of academic research, subject always to the full Conditions of use: http://www.nature.com/authors/editorial_policies/license.html#terms
spellingShingle Article
Konno, Hiroyasu
Yamauchi, Shota
Berglund, Anders
Putney, Ryan M.
Mulé, James J.
Barber, Glen N.
Suppression of STING Signaling through Epigenetic Silencing and Missense Mutation Impedes DNA-Damage Mediated Cytokine Production
title Suppression of STING Signaling through Epigenetic Silencing and Missense Mutation Impedes DNA-Damage Mediated Cytokine Production
title_full Suppression of STING Signaling through Epigenetic Silencing and Missense Mutation Impedes DNA-Damage Mediated Cytokine Production
title_fullStr Suppression of STING Signaling through Epigenetic Silencing and Missense Mutation Impedes DNA-Damage Mediated Cytokine Production
title_full_unstemmed Suppression of STING Signaling through Epigenetic Silencing and Missense Mutation Impedes DNA-Damage Mediated Cytokine Production
title_short Suppression of STING Signaling through Epigenetic Silencing and Missense Mutation Impedes DNA-Damage Mediated Cytokine Production
title_sort suppression of sting signaling through epigenetic silencing and missense mutation impedes dna-damage mediated cytokine production
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6029885/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29367762
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41388-017-0120-0
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