Publication: cGAS-Like Receptors Sense RNA and Control 3′2′-cGAMP Signalling in Drosophila
No Thumbnail Available
Open/View Files
Date
2021-07-14
Published Version
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
The Harvard community has made this article openly available. Please share how this access benefits you.
Citation
Slavik, Kailey M., Benjamin R. Morehouse, Adelyn E. Ragucci, Wen Zhou, Xianlong Ai, Yuqiang Chen, Lihua Li, et al. 2021. “cGAS-Like Receptors Sense RNA and Control 3′2′-cGAMP Signalling in Drosophila.” Nature (London) 597 (7874): 109–13.
Research Data
Abstract
<jats:title>Abstract</jats:title><jats:p>Cyclic GMP–AMP synthase (cGAS) is a cytosolic DNA sensor that produces the second messenger cG[2′–5′]pA[3′–5′]p (2′3′-cGAMP) and controls activation of innate immunity in mammalian cells<jats:sup>1–5</jats:sup>. Animal genomes typically encode multiple proteins with predicted homology to cGAS<jats:sup>6–10</jats:sup>, but the function of these uncharacterized enzymes is unknown. Here we show that cGAS-like receptors (cGLRs) are innate immune sensors that are capable of recognizing divergent molecular patterns and catalysing synthesis of distinct nucleotide second messenger signals. Crystal structures of human and insect cGLRs reveal a nucleotidyltransferase signalling core shared with cGAS and a diversified primary ligand-binding surface modified with notable insertions and deletions. We demonstrate that surface remodelling of cGLRs enables altered ligand specificity and used a forward biochemical screen to identify cGLR1 as a double-stranded RNA sensor in the model organism <jats:italic>Drosophila melanogaster</jats:italic>. We show that RNA recognition activates <jats:italic>Drosophila</jats:italic> cGLR1 to synthesize the novel product cG[3′–5′]pA[2′–5′]p (3′2′-cGAMP). A crystal structure of <jats:italic>Drosophila</jats:italic> stimulator of interferon genes (dSTING) in complex with 3′2′-cGAMP explains selective isomer recognition, and 3′2′-cGAMP induces an enhanced antiviral state in vivo that protects from viral infection. Similar to radiation of Toll-like receptors in pathogen immunity, our results establish cGLRs as a diverse family of metazoan pattern recognition receptors.</jats:p>
Description
Other Available Sources
Keywords
Multidisciplinary
Terms of Use
Metadata Only