cGAS-STING signalling regulates microglial chemotaxis in genome instability

Author:

Talbot Emily J1,Joshi Lisha1,Thornton Peter2,Dezfouli Mahya3,Tsafou Kalliopi4,Perkinton Michael2,Khoronenkova Svetlana V1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biochemistry, University of Cambridge , Cambridge , UK

2. Neuroscience, R&D BioPharmaceuticals , AstraZeneca, Cambridge , UK

3. Translational Genomics, Discovery Biology, Discovery Sciences, BioPharmaceuticals R&D , AstraZeneca, Mölndal, Gothenburg , Sweden

4. Department of Data Sciences & Quantitative Biology , AstraZeneca, Cambridge , UK

Abstract

Abstract Defective DNA damage signalling and repair is a hallmark of age-related and genetic neurodegenerative disease. One mechanism implicated in disease progression is DNA damage-driven neuroinflammation, which is largely mediated by tissue-resident immune cells, microglia. Here, we utilise human microglia-like cell models of persistent DNA damage and ATM kinase deficiency to investigate how genome instability shapes microglial function. We demonstrate that upon DNA damage the cytosolic DNA sensing cGAS-STING axis drives chronic inflammation and a robust chemokine response, exemplified by production of CCL5 and CXCL10. Transcriptomic analyses revealed that cell migratory pathways were highly enriched upon IFN-β treatment of human iPSC-derived microglia, indicating that the chemokine response to DNA damage mirrors type I interferon signalling. Furthermore, we find that STING deletion leads to a defect in microglial chemotaxis under basal conditions and upon ATM kinase loss. Overall, this work provides mechanistic insights into cGAS-STING-dependent neuroinflammatory mechanisms and consequences of genome instability in the central nervous system.

Funder

Wellcome Trust

Royal Society Sir Henry Dale Fellowship

Wellcome-Beit Prize

Royal Society

University of Cambridge

AstraZeneca PhD studentship

Ataxia Telangiectasia Society

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Genetics

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