Litcius/Paper detail

TBK1 recruitment to STING mediates autoinflammatory arthritis caused by defective DNA clearance

Tong Li, Seoyun Yum, Minghao Li, Xiang Chen, Xiaoxia Zuo, Zhijian J. Chen

2021The Journal of Experimental Medicine70 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Defective DNA clearance in DNase II-/- mice leads to lethal inflammatory diseases that can be rescued by deleting cGAS or STING, but the role of distinct signaling pathways downstream of STING in the disease manifestation is not known. We found that the STING S365A mutation, which abrogates IRF3 binding and type I interferon induction, rescued the embryonic lethality of DNase II-/- mice. However, the STING S365A mutant retains the ability to recruit TBK1 and activate NF-κB, and DNase II-/-STING-S365A mice exhibited severe polyarthritis, which was alleviated by neutralizing antibodies against TNF-α or IL-6 receptor. In contrast, the STING L373A mutation or C-terminal tail truncation, which disrupts TBK1 binding and therefore prevents activation of both IRF3 and NF-κB, completely rescued the phenotypes of DNase II-/- mice. These results demonstrate that TBK1 recruitment to STING mediates autoinflammatory arthritis independently of type I interferons. Inhibiting TBK1 binding to STING may be a therapeutic strategy for certain autoinflammatory diseases instigated by self-DNA.

Topics & Concepts

StingIRF3TANK-binding kinase 1Stimulator of interferon genesPolyarthritisMutationArthritisBiologyImmunologyMedicineSignal transductionCell biologyGeneGeneticsInnate immune systemImmune systemAerospace engineeringEngineeringMitogen-activated protein kinase kinaseProtein kinase Cinterferon and immune responsesInflammasome and immune disordersViral Infections and Vectors