Telomere-to-mitochondria signalling by ZBP1 mediates replicative crisis.
Joe NassourLucia Gutierrez AguiarAdriana CorreiaTobias T SchmidtLaura MainzSara PrzetockaCandy HaggblomNimesha TadepalleApril E WilliamsMaxim N ShokhirevSemih Can AkincilarVinay TergaonkarGerald S ShadelJan KarlsederPublished in: Nature (2023)
Cancers arise through the accumulation of genetic and epigenetic alterations that enable cells to evade telomere-based proliferative barriers and achieve immortality. One such barrier is replicative crisis-an autophagy-dependent program that eliminates checkpoint-deficient cells with unstable telomeres and other cancer-relevant chromosomal aberrations 1,2 . However, little is known about the molecular events that regulate the onset of this important tumour-suppressive barrier. Here we identified the innate immune sensor Z-DNA binding protein 1 (ZBP1) as a regulator of the crisis program. A crisis-associated isoform of ZBP1 is induced by the cGAS-STING DNA-sensing pathway, but reaches full activation only when associated with telomeric-repeat-containing RNA (TERRA) transcripts that are synthesized from dysfunctional telomeres. TERRA-bound ZBP1 oligomerizes into filaments on the outer mitochondrial membrane of a subset of mitochondria, where it activates the innate immune adapter protein mitochondrial antiviral-signalling protein (MAVS). We propose that these oligomerization properties of ZBP1 serve as a signal amplification mechanism, where few TERRA-ZBP1 interactions are sufficient to launch a detrimental MAVS-dependent interferon response. Our study reveals a mechanism for telomere-mediated tumour suppression, whereby dysfunctional telomeres activate innate immune responses through mitochondrial TERRA-ZBP1 complexes to eliminate cells destined for neoplastic transformation.
Keyphrases
- induced apoptosis
- innate immune
- oxidative stress
- immune response
- public health
- cell cycle arrest
- cell death
- binding protein
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- signaling pathway
- nucleic acid
- dna methylation
- quality improvement
- dna damage
- circulating tumor
- copy number
- gene expression
- small molecule
- dendritic cells
- young adults
- cell free
- toll like receptor
- reactive oxygen species
- amino acid
- cell proliferation
- pi k akt