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Data from STING Promotes Homeostasis via Regulation of Cell Proliferation and Chromosomal Stability

Posted on 2023-03-31 - 03:07
Abstract

Given the integral role of stimulator of interferon genes (STING, TMEM173) in the innate immune response, its loss or impairment in cancer is thought to primarily affect antitumor immunity. Here we demonstrate a role for STING in the maintenance of cellular homeostasis through regulation of the cell cycle. Depletion of STING in human and murine cancer cells and tumors resulted in increased proliferation compared with wild-type controls. Microarray analysis revealed genes involved in cell-cycle regulation are differentially expressed in STINGko compared with WT MEFs. STING-mediated regulation of the cell cycle converged on NFκB- and p53-driven activation of p21. The absence of STING led to premature activation of cyclin-dependent kinase 1 (CDK1), early onset to S-phase and mitosis, and increased chromosome instability, which was enhanced by ionizing radiation. These results suggest a pivotal role for STING in maintaining cellular homeostasis and response to genotoxic stress.

Significance:

These findings provide clear mechanistic understanding of the role of STING in cell-cycle regulation, which may be exploited in cancer therapy because most normal cells express STING, while many tumor cells do not.

See related commentary by Gius and Zhu, p. 1295

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FUNDING

Ludwig Center for Metastasis Research

Virginia and Ludwig Foundation for Cancer Research

Lung Cancer Research Foundation

NIH

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Cancer Research

AUTHORS (13)

  • Diana Rose E. Ranoa
    Ryan C. Widau
    Stephen Mallon
    Akash D. Parekh
    Claudia M. Nicolae
    Xiaona Huang
    Michael J. Bolt
    Ainhoa Arina
    Renate Parry
    Stephen J. Kron
    George-Lucian Moldovan
    Nikolai N. Khodarev
    Ralph R. Weichselbaum
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