cGAS suppresses genomic instability as a decelerator of replication forks

Hao Chen(Harvard University), Hao Chen(Harvard University), Jiamin Zhang(Harvard University), Yumin Wang(Harvard University), Antoine Simoneau(Harvard University), Hui Yang(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Arthur S. Levine(UPMC Hillman Cancer Center), Lee Zou(Harvard University), Zhijian J. Chen(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Li Lan(Harvard University)
Science Advances
October 14, 2020
Cited by 139Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

The cyclic GMP-AMP synthase (cGAS), a sensor of cytosolic DNA, is critical for the innate immune response. Here, we show that loss of cGAS in untransformed and cancer cells results in uncontrolled DNA replication, hyperproliferation, and genomic instability. While the majority of cGAS is cytoplasmic, a fraction of cGAS associates with chromatin. cGAS interacts with replication fork proteins in a DNA binding-dependent manner, suggesting that cGAS encounters replication forks in DNA. Independent of cGAMP and STING, cGAS slows replication forks by binding to DNA in the nucleus. In the absence of cGAS, replication forks are accelerated, but fork stability is compromised. Consequently, cGAS-deficient cells are exposed to replication stress and become increasingly sensitive to radiation and chemotherapy. Thus, by acting as a decelerator of DNA replication forks, cGAS controls replication dynamics and suppresses replication-associated DNA damage, suggesting that cGAS is an attractive target for exploiting the genomic instability of cancer cells.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis