AI Article Synopsis

  • Innate immune pathways in organisms rapidly respond to infections while preventing autoimmunity, with humans using the cGAS receptor to activate antiviral signaling through the production of cyclic GMP-AMP (cGAMP).
  • Bacteria have similar immune receptors called CD-NTases that detect viral infections and produce various nucleotide second messengers, but the regulation of CD-NTase activation is unclear.
  • The study reveals that the protein Cap2 primes CD-NTases for action using a mechanism similar to ubiquitin transfer, while another protein, Cap3, moderates this activity by cleaving the CD-NTase-target complexes.

Article Abstract

In all organisms, innate immune pathways sense infection and rapidly activate potent immune responses while avoiding inappropriate activation (autoimmunity). In humans, the innate immune receptor cyclic GMP-AMP synthase (cGAS) detects viral infection to produce the nucleotide second messenger cyclic GMP-AMP (cGAMP), which initiates stimulator of interferon genes (STING)-dependent antiviral signalling. Bacteria encode evolutionary predecessors of cGAS called cGAS/DncV-like nucleotidyltransferases (CD-NTases), which detect bacteriophage infection and produce diverse nucleotide second messengers. How bacterial CD-NTase activation is controlled remains unknown. Here we show that CD-NTase-associated protein 2 (Cap2) primes bacterial CD-NTases for activation through a ubiquitin transferase-like mechanism. A cryo-electron microscopy structure of the Cap2-CD-NTase complex reveals Cap2 as an all-in-one ubiquitin transferase-like protein, with distinct domains resembling eukaryotic E1 and E2 proteins. The structure captures a reactive-intermediate state with the CD-NTase C terminus positioned in the Cap2 E1 active site and conjugated to AMP. Cap2 conjugates the CD-NTase C terminus to a target molecule that primes the CD-NTase for increased cGAMP production. We further demonstrate that a specific endopeptidase, Cap3, balances Cap2 activity by cleaving CD-NTase-target conjugates. Our data demonstrate that bacteria control immune signalling using an ancient, minimized ubiquitin transferase-like system and provide insight into the evolution of the E1 and E2 machinery across domains of life.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10292035PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41586-022-05647-4DOI Listing

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