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DNA damage contributes to neurotoxic inflammation in Aicardi-Goutières syndrome astrocytes.

Anna Maria Sole GiordanoMarco LucianiFrancesca GattoMonah Abou-AlezzChiara BeghèLucrezia Della VolpeAlessandro MigliaraSara ValsoniMarco GenuaMonika Dzieciatkowska MGiacomo FratiJulie Tahraoui-BoriesSilvia Clara GilianiSimona OrcesiElisa FazziRenato OstuniAngelo D'AlessandroRaffaella Di MiccoIvan MerelliAngelo LombardoMartin A M ReijnsNatalia GromakAngela GrittiAnna Kajaste-Rudnitski
Published in: The Journal of experimental medicine (2022)
Aberrant induction of type I IFN is a hallmark of the inherited encephalopathy Aicardi-Goutières syndrome (AGS), but the mechanisms triggering disease in the human central nervous system (CNS) remain elusive. Here, we generated human models of AGS using genetically modified and patient-derived pluripotent stem cells harboring TREX1 or RNASEH2B loss-of-function alleles. Genome-wide transcriptomic analysis reveals that spontaneous proinflammatory activation in AGS astrocytes initiates signaling cascades impacting multiple CNS cell subsets analyzed at the single-cell level. We identify accumulating DNA damage, with elevated R-loop and micronuclei formation, as a driver of STING- and NLRP3-related inflammatory responses leading to the secretion of neurotoxic mediators. Importantly, pharmacological inhibition of proapoptotic or inflammatory cascades in AGS astrocytes prevents neurotoxicity without apparent impact on their increased type I IFN responses. Together, our work identifies DNA damage as a major driver of neurotoxic inflammation in AGS astrocytes, suggests a role for AGS gene products in R-loop homeostasis, and identifies common denominators of disease that can be targeted to prevent astrocyte-mediated neurotoxicity in AGS.
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