Publication | Open Access
Significance of Respiratory Symptoms and the Diagnosis of Chronic Bronchitis in a Working Population
961
Citations
15
References
1959
Year
Pulmonary CareProtein AssemblyDiagnosisMolecular BiologyAnalytical UltracentrifugationNucleic Acid BiomarkersNucleic Acid ChemistryChronic BronchitisRespiratory InfectionAllergyBiochemistryRespiratory DiseasesWorking PopulationBiomolecular InteractionPulmonary MedicineCgas DimersCgamp FormationStructural BiologyPulmonary DiseaseBiomolecular EngineeringHuman CgasNatural SciencesMolecular BiophysicsMedicineRespiratory Symptoms
The cyclic GMP-AMP synthase (cGAS)–cGAMP–STING pathway plays a key role in innate immunity, with cGAS sensing both pathogenic and mislocalized DNA in the cytoplasm. Human cGAS (h-cGAS) constitutes an important drug target for control of antiinflammatory responses that can contribute to the onset of autoimmune diseases. Recent studies have established that the positively charged N-terminal segment of cGAS contributes to enhancement of cGAS enzymatic activity as a result of DNA-induced liquid-phase condensation. We have identified an additional cGASCD–DNA interface (labeled site-C; CD, catalytic domain) in the crystal structure of a human SRY.cGASCD–DNA complex, with mutations along this basic site-C cGAS interface disrupting liquid-phase condensation, as monitored by cGAMP formation, gel shift, spin-down, and turbidity assays, as well as time-lapse imaging of liquid droplet formation. We expand on an earlier ladder model of cGAS dimers bound to a pair of parallel-aligned DNAs to propose a multivalent interaction-mediated cluster model to account for DNA-mediated condensation involving both the N-terminal domain of cGAS and the site-C cGAS–DNA interface. We also report the crystal structure of the h-cGASCD–DNA complex containing a triple mutant that disrupts the site-C interface, with this complex serving as a future platform for guiding cGAS inhibitor development at the DNA-bound h-cGAS level. Finally, we solved the structure of RU.521 bound in two alternate alignments to apo h-cGASCD, thereby occupying more of the catalytic pocket and providing insights into further optimization of active-site–binding inhibitors.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1