Litcius/Paper detail

Drosophila STING protein has a role in lipid metabolism

Katarina Akhmetova, Maxim Balasov, Igor Chesnokov

2021eLife54 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Stimulator of interferon genes (STING) plays an important role in innate immunity by controlling type I interferon response against invaded pathogens. In this work, we describe a previously unknown role of STING in lipid metabolism in Drosophila . Flies with STING deletion are sensitive to starvation and oxidative stress, have reduced lipid storage, and downregulated expression of lipid metabolism genes. We found that Drosophila STING interacts with lipid synthesizing enzymes acetyl-CoA carboxylase (ACC) and fatty acid synthase (FASN). ACC and FASN also interact with each other, indicating that all three proteins may be components of a large multi-enzyme complex. The deletion of Drosophila STING leads to disturbed ACC localization and decreased FASN enzyme activity. Together, our results demonstrate a previously undescribed role of STING in lipid metabolism in Drosophila .

Topics & Concepts

Lipid metabolismBiologyFatty acid synthaseStingLipid dropletEnzymeBiochemistryMetabolismInterferonAcetyl-CoA carboxylaseInnate immune systemLipid signalingCell biologyFatty acid metabolismGene expressionLipid AGeneATP synthaseDrosophila melanogasterMetabolic pathwayPyruvate carboxylaseChemistryFatty acidImmunityinterferon and immune responsesInflammasome and immune disordersRNA regulation and disease