cGAS drives noncanonical-inflammasome activation in age-related macular degeneration

Geographic atrophy is a blinding form of age-related macular degeneration characterized by retinal pigmented epithelium (RPE) death; the RPE also exhibits DICER1 deficiency, resultant accumulation of endogenous Alu-retroelement RNA, and NLRP3-inflammasome activation. How the inflammasome is activate...

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Published inNature medicine Vol. 24; no. 1; pp. 50 - 61
Main Authors Kerur, Nagaraj, Fukuda, Shinichi, Banerjee, Daipayan, Kim, Younghee, Fu, Dongxu, Apicella, Ivana, Varshney, Akhil, Yasuma, Reo, Fowler, Benjamin J, Baghdasaryan, Elmira, Marion, Kenneth M, Huang, Xiwen, Yasuma, Tetsuhiro, Hirano, Yoshio, Serbulea, Vlad, Ambati, Meenakshi, Ambati, Vidya L, Kajiwara, Yuji, Ambati, Kameshwari, Hirahara, Shuichiro, Bastos-Carvalho, Ana, Ogura, Yuichiro, Terasaki, Hiroko, Oshika, Tetsuro, Kim, Kyung Bo, Hinton, David R, Leitinger, Norbert, Cambier, John C, Buxbaum, Joseph D, Kenney, M Cristina, Jazwinski, S Michal, Nagai, Hiroshi, Hara, Isao, West, A Phillip, Fitzgerald, Katherine A, Sadda, SriniVas R, Gelfand, Bradley D, Ambati, Jayakrishna
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States Nature Publishing Group 01.01.2018
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Summary:Geographic atrophy is a blinding form of age-related macular degeneration characterized by retinal pigmented epithelium (RPE) death; the RPE also exhibits DICER1 deficiency, resultant accumulation of endogenous Alu-retroelement RNA, and NLRP3-inflammasome activation. How the inflammasome is activated in this untreatable disease is largely unknown. Here we demonstrate that RPE degeneration in human-cell-culture and mouse models is driven by a noncanonical-inflammasome pathway that activates caspase-4 (caspase-11 in mice) and caspase-1, and requires cyclic GMP-AMP synthase (cGAS)-dependent interferon-β production and gasdermin D-dependent interleukin-18 secretion. Decreased DICER1 levels or Alu-RNA accumulation triggers cytosolic escape of mitochondrial DNA, which engages cGAS. Moreover, caspase-4, gasdermin D, interferon-β, and cGAS levels were elevated in the RPE in human eyes with geographic atrophy. Collectively, these data highlight an unexpected role of cGAS in responding to mobile-element transcripts, reveal cGAS-driven interferon signaling as a conduit for mitochondrial-damage-induced inflammasome activation, expand the immune-sensing repertoire of cGAS and caspase-4 to noninfectious human disease, and identify new potential targets for treatment of a major cause of blindness.
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ISSN:1078-8956
1546-170X
DOI:10.1038/nm.4450