The cGAS-STING pathway is dispensable in a mouse model of LMNA -cardiomyopathy despite nuclear envelope rupture.

Atsuki En, Hanumakumar Bogireddi,Briana Thomas,Alexis Stutzman, Sachie Ikegami, Brigitte LaForest,Omar Almakki, Peter Pytel,Ivan P Moskowitz,Kohta Ikegami

bioRxiv : the preprint server for biology(2023)

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摘要
Mutations in the nuclear Lamin A/C gene ( ) cause diverse degenerative disorders, including malignant dilated cardiomyopathy in adults. A prevailing hypothesis postulates that mutations cause nuclear envelope ruptures that trigger pathogenic inflammatory signaling via the cGAS-STING cytosolic DNA-sensing pathway. Here, we provide evidence against this hypothesis, using a mouse model of -related cardiomyopathy that mimics Lamin A/C protein reduction observed in patient cardiomyocytes. We observed that pervasive nuclear envelope ruptures preceded the onset of cardiac transcriptional modulation and dilated cardiomyopathy. Nuclear ruptures activated DNA damage response without causing immediate cardiomyocyte death. However, cGAS-STING downstream cytokine genes remained inactive in the mutant cardiomyocytes. Deleting or did not alleviate cardiomyopathy. Instead, extracellular matrix signaling was predicted to emanate from Lamin A/C-reduced cardiomyocytes to communicate with fibroblasts in the heart. These findings suggest that cGAS-STING is not a major pathogenetic contributor to -related dilated cardiomyopathy in adult humans.
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