Centromere defects, chromosome instability, and cGAS-STING activation in systemic sclerosis

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Abstract

Centromere defects in Systemic Sclerosis (SSc) have remained unexplored despite the fact that many centromere proteins were discovered in patients with SSc. Here we report that lesion skin fibroblasts from SSc patients show marked alterations in centromeric DNA. SSc fibroblasts also show DNA damage, abnormal chromosome segregation, aneuploidy (only in diffuse cutaneous (dcSSc)) and micronuclei (in all types of SSc), some of which lose centromere identity while retaining centromere DNA sequences. Strikingly, we find cytoplasmic “leaking” of centromere proteins in limited cutaneous SSc (lcSSc) fibroblasts. Cytoplasmic centromere proteins co-localize with antigen presenting MHC Class II molecules, which correlate precisely with the presence of anti-centromere antibodies. CENPA expression and micronuclei formation correlate highly with activation of the cGAS-STING/IFN-β pathway as well as markers of reactive oxygen species (ROS) and fibrosis, ultimately suggesting a link between centromere alterations, chromosome instability, SSc autoimmunity, and fibrosis.

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Paul, S., Kaplan, M. H., Khanna, D., McCourt, P. M., Saha, A. K., Tsou, P. S., … Contreras-Galindo, R. (2022). Centromere defects, chromosome instability, and cGAS-STING activation in systemic sclerosis. Nature Communications, 13(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-022-34775-8

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