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Series GSE100771 Query DataSets for GSE100771
Status Public on Jul 24, 2017
Title cGAS surveillance of micronuclei links genome instability to innate immunity
Organism Mus musculus
Experiment type Expression profiling by high throughput sequencing
Summary DNA is strictly compartmentalised within the nucleus to prevent autoimmunity despite this cGAS, a cytosolic sensor of dsDNA, is activated in autoinflammatory disorders and by DNA damage. Precisely how cellular DNA gains access to the cytoplasm remains to be determined. Here, we report that cGAS localises to micronuclei arising from genome instability in a model of monogenic autoinflammation, after exogenous DNA damage and spontaneously in human cancer cells. These micronuclei occur after mis-segregation of DNA during cell division and consist of chromatin surrounded by their own nuclear membrane. Breakdown of the micronuclear envelope, a process associated with chromothripsis, leads to rapid accumulation of cGAS, providing a mechanism by which self-DNA becomes exposed to the cytosol. cGAS binds to and is activated by chromatin and consistent with a mitotic origin, micronuclei formation and the proinflammatory response following DNA-damage are cell-cycle dependent. Furthermore, by combining live-cell laser microdissection with single cell transcriptomics, we establish that induction of interferon stimulated gene expression occurs in micronucleated cells. We therefore conclude that micronuclei represent an important source of immunostimulatory DNA. As micronuclei formed from lagging chromosomes also activate this pathway, cGAS recognition of micronuclei may act as a cell-intrinsic immune surveillance mechanism detecting a range of neoplasia-inducing processes.
 
Overall design RNA-seq of 35 individual mouse embryonic fibroblasts 48 h after 1 Gy irradiation: 21 test (with micronuclei) and 14 controls (without micronuclei).
 
Contributor(s) Reijns MA, Simpson DJ, Olova N, Wheeler A, Jackson AP, Chandra T
Citation(s) 28738408
Submission date Jul 03, 2017
Last update date Mar 03, 2021
Contact name Vittorio Sebastiano
E-mail(s) vsebast@stanford.edu
Organization name Stanford University
Department OB-GYN/Reproductive, Perinatal and Stem Cell Biology Research
Lab Sebastiano Lab
Street address 265 Campus Drive
City Stanford
State/province California
ZIP/Postal code 94305-5454
Country USA
 
Platforms (1)
GPL21626 NextSeq 550 (Mus musculus)
Samples (35)
GSM2693064 MR-scRNAseq-40080044-cell-21
GSM2693065 MR-scRNAseq-40080044-cell-34
GSM2693066 MR-scRNAseq-40080044-cell-38
Relations
BioProject PRJNA392942
SRA SRP111009

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Supplementary file Size Download File type/resource
GSE100771_MR-scRNAseq-40080044_35-cells_Feature_counts.csv.gz 461.8 Kb (ftp)(http) CSV
GSE100771_Pheno.csv.gz 2.7 Kb (ftp)(http) CSV
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Processed data are available on Series record

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