ADAR1 mutation causes ZBP1-dependent immunopathology
2022-12-07NicholasHubbardetal
Nicholas W Hubbard, et al.
The RNA-editing enzyme ADAR1 is essential for the suppression of innate immune activation and pathology caused by aberrant recognition of self-RNA, a role it carries out by disrupting the duplex structure of endogenous double-stranded RNA species1,2. A point mutation in the sequence encoding the Z-DNA-binding domain (ZBD) of ADAR1 is associated with severe autoinflammatory disease3-5. ZBP1 is the only other ZBD-containing mammalian protein6, and its activation can trigger both cell death and transcriptional responses through the kinases RIPK1 and RIPK3, and the protease caspase 8 (refs. 7-9). Here we show that the pathology caused by alteration of the ZBD of ADAR1 is driven by activation of ZBP1. We found that ablation of ZBP1 fully rescued the overt pathology caused by ADAR1 alteration, without fully reversing the underlying inflammatory program caused by this alteration. Whereas loss of RIPK3 partially phenocopied the protective effects of ZBP1 ablation, combined deletion of caspase 8 and RIPK3, or of caspase 8 and MLKL, unexpectedly exacerbated the pathogenic effects of ADAR1 alteration. These findings indicate that ADAR1 is a negative regulator of sterile ZBP1 activation, and that ZBP1-dependent signalling underlies the autoinflammatory pathology caused by alteration of ADAR1.
杂志排行
四川生理科学杂志的其它文章
- Analysis of somatic mutations in 131 human brains reveals aging-associated hypermutability
- ADAR1 averts fatal type I interferon induction by ZBP1
- What is a cell type and how to define it?
- The molecular epidemiology of multiple zoonotic origins of SARS-CoV-2
- Recombination of repeat elements generates somatic complexity in human genomes
- Impaired ketogenesis ties metabolism to T cell dysfunction in COVID-19