Mitochondrial stress-activated cGAS-STING pathway inhibits thermogenic program and contributes to overnutrition-induced obesity in mice.
Juli BaiChristopher CervantesSijia HeJieyu HeGeorge R PlaskoJie WenZhi LiDongqing YinChuntao ZhangMeilian LiuLily Q DongFeng LiuPublished in: Communications biology (2020)
Obesity is a global epidemic that is caused by excessive energy intake or inefficient energy expenditure. Brown or beige fat dissipates energy as heat through non-shivering thermogenesis by their high density of mitochondria. However, how the mitochondrial stress-induced signal is coupled to the cellular thermogenic program remains elusive. Here, we show that mitochondrial DNA escape-induced activation of the cGAS-STING pathway negatively regulates thermogenesis in fat-specific DsbA-L knockout mice, a model of adipose tissue mitochondrial stress. Conversely, fat-specific overexpression of DsbA-L or knockout of STING protects mice against high-fat diet-induced obesity. Mechanistically, activation of the cGAS-STING pathway in adipocytes activated phosphodiesterase PDE3B/PDE4, leading to decreased cAMP levels and PKA signaling, thus reduced thermogenesis. Our study demonstrates that mitochondrial stress-activated cGAS-STING pathway functions as a sentinel signal that suppresses thermogenesis in adipose tissue. Targeting adipose cGAS-STING pathway may thus be a potential therapeutic strategy to counteract overnutrition-induced obesity and its associated metabolic diseases.
Keyphrases
- adipose tissue
- high fat diet induced
- insulin resistance
- stress induced
- high fat diet
- mitochondrial dna
- oxidative stress
- diabetic rats
- high glucose
- high density
- weight gain
- metabolic syndrome
- quality improvement
- heat stress
- type diabetes
- weight loss
- copy number
- body mass index
- signaling pathway
- endothelial cells
- drug delivery
- fatty acid
- binding protein
- protein kinase
- endoplasmic reticulum