4.7 Article

DNA Repair Inhibition Leads to Active Export of Repetitive Sequences to the Cytoplasm Triggering an Inflammatory Response

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 41, Issue 45, Pages 9286-9307

Publisher

SOC NEUROSCIENCE
DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0845-21.2021

Keywords

damage; cytoplasmic DNA; microglia; inflammation; repetitive elements

Categories

Funding

  1. Lo Ka Chung Charitable Foundation (The Hong Kong Epigenome Project)
  2. Ming Wai Lau Center for Reparative Medicine Associate Member Program
  3. Hong Kong University of Science and Technology [R9321]
  4. Research Grants Council of the Hong Kong SAR [26104216, 16101315, 16124916, C6009-17G, AoE/M-604/16]
  5. University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine

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Research suggests that failure to repair DNA damage can lead to sterile inflammation in neurodegenerative diseases, sourced from transcriptionally inactive genomic regions and actively exported to the cytoplasm for degradation through a CRM1-dependent mechanism.
Adult-onset neurodegenerative diseases are often accompanied by evidence of a chronic inflammation that includes activation of microglial cells and altered levels of brain cytokines. Aspects of this response are likely secondary reactions to neurodegeneration, but for many illnesses the inflammation may itself be an early and even causative disease event. In such cases, the inflammation is referred to as sterile as it occurs in the absence of an actual bacterial or viral pathogen. A potent trigger of sterile inflammation in CNS microglia has been shown to be the presence of DNA in the cytoplasm (cytoDNA) induced either by direct DNA damage or by inhibited DNA repair. We have shown that cytoDNA comes from the cell nucleus as a result of insufficient DNA damage repair. Using wild-type and Atm(-/-)mouse microglia, we extend these observations here by showing that its genomic origins are not random, but rather are heavily biased toward transcriptionally inactive, intergenic regions, in particular repetitive elements and AT-rich sequences. Once released from the genome, in both males and females, we show that cytoDNA is actively exported to the cytoplasm by a CRM1-dependent mechanism. In the cytoplasm, it is degraded either by a cytosolic exonuclease, Trex1, or an autophagy pathway that ends with degradation in the lysosome. Blocking the accumulation of cytoDNA prevents the emergence of the sterile inflammation reaction. These findings offer new insights into the emergence of sterile inflammation and offer novel approaches that may be of use in combatting a wide range of neurodegenerative conditions.

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