Abstract

The cyclic dinucleotide (CDN)-stimulator of interferon genes (STING) pathway plays an important role in the detection of viral and bacterial pathogens in animals. Previous studies have shown that the metazoan second messenger cyclic [G(2',5')pA(3',5')p] (2',3'-cGAMP) generated by cyclic GMP-AMP synthase cGAS binds STING with high affinity compared with bacterial CDNs such as c-di-GMP, c-di-AMP, and 3',3'-cGAMP. Despite recent progress indicating that the CDN-binding domain (CBD) of dimeric STING binds asymmetric 2',3'-cGAMP preferentially over symmetric 3',3'-CDNs, it remains an open question whether STING molecules, such as human STING, adopt a symmetric dimeric conformation to efficiently engage its asymmetric ligand. Here, structural studies of the CBD from porcine STING (STINGCBD) in complex with CDNs at 1.76-2.6 Å resolution revealed that porcine STINGCBD, unlike its human and mouse counterparts, can adopt an asymmetric ligand-binding pocket to accommodate the CDNs. We observed that the extensive interactions and shape complementarity between asymmetric 2',3'-cGAMP and the ligand-binding pocket make it the most preferred ligand for porcine STING and that geometry constraints limit the binding between symmetric 3',3'-CDN and porcine STING. The ligand-discrimination mechanism of porcine STING observed here expands our understanding of how the CDN-STING pathway is activated and of its role in antiviral defense.

Highlights

  • The cyclic dinucleotide (CDN)-stimulator of interferon genes (STING) pathway plays an important role in the detection of viral and bacterial pathogens in animals

  • Previous studies have shown that the metazoan second messenger cyclic [G(2؅,5؅)pA(3؅,5؅)p] (2؅,3؅-cGAMP) generated by cyclic GMPAMP synthase cGAS binds STING with high affinity compared with bacterial CDNs such as c-di-GMP, c-di-AMP, and 3؅,3؅cGAMP

  • The binding affinity of porcine STING for 3Ј,3Ј-cGAMP ligand is the lowest with a Kd of 12.8 ␮M in our microscale thermophoresis (MST) assay (Fig. 1D). These results show that, like STING from other species, porcine STING binds the endogenous ligand 2Ј,3Ј-cGAMP with the highest binding affinity

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Summary

Edited by Wolfgang Peti

The cyclic dinucleotide (CDN)-stimulator of interferon genes (STING) pathway plays an important role in the detection of viral and bacterial pathogens in animals. Previous studies have shown that the metazoan second messenger cyclic [G(2؅,5؅)pA(3؅,5؅)p] (2؅,3؅-cGAMP) generated by cyclic GMPAMP synthase cGAS binds STING with high affinity compared with bacterial CDNs such as c-di-GMP, c-di-AMP, and 3؅,3؅cGAMP. 2Ј,3Ј-cGAMP as the endogenous ligand has The STING protein consists of four transmembrane helices been shown previously to have higher binding affinity for STING in the N terminus that is followed by the cytosolic CDN-bindthan the bacterial second messengers [20, 21]. The full-length STING was solved by the cryo-EM method [23] It reveals that ligand binding induces these conformational changes mentioned above but results in the cytosolic domain half-turn rotation relative to the transmembrane region as well, which adds another layer of regulation of STING signaling.

Results
Discussion
Protein expression and purification
MST assay
Protein Data Bank codes
Full Text
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