Antecedent chromatin organization determines cGAS recruitment to ruptured micronuclei

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Abstract

Micronuclei (MN) are cytosolic bodies that sequester acentric fragments or mis-segregated chromosomes from the primary nucleus. Spontaneous rupture of the MN envelope allows recognition by the viral receptor cyclic GMP-AMP synthase (cGAS), initiating interferon signaling downstream of DNA damage. Here, we demonstrate that MN rupture is permissive but not sufficient for cGAS localization. Chromatin characteristics such as histone 3, lysine 79 dimethylation (H3K79me2) are present in the nucleus before DNA damage, retained in ruptured MN, and regulate cGAS recruitment. cGAS is further responsive to dynamic intra-MN processes occurring prior to rupture, including transcription. MN chromatin tethering via the nucleosome acidic patch is necessary for cGAS-dependent interferon signaling. Our data suggest that both damage-antecedent nuclear chromatin status and MN-contained chromatin organizational changes dictate cGAS recruitment and the magnitude of the cGAS-driven interferon cascade. Our work defines MN as integrative signaling hubs for the cellular response to genotoxic stress.

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MacDonald, K. M., Nicholson-Puthenveedu, S., Tageldein, M. M., Khasnis, S., Arrowsmith, C. H., & Harding, S. M. (2023). Antecedent chromatin organization determines cGAS recruitment to ruptured micronuclei. Nature Communications, 14(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-023-36195-8

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