Acute Lung injury (ALI) is an uncontrolled systemic inflammatory response from bacterial or viral infection. The cyclic GMP-AMP synthase (cGAS) detects cytosolic double stranded DNA (dsDNA) release from bacteria, viruses, or apoptotic cells and induces innate immunity by generating the second messenger cGAMP and activation of stimulator of interferon genes (STING). However, the mechanisms regulating cGAS activity upon binding dsDNA remain elusive. Here, we show for the first in-depth analysis of mechanisms inducing cGAS activation in using lung endothelial cells (EC) and establish its translational relevance in causing ALI using a mouse model. We show that within 15 min, dsDNA ligation with cGAS mediates its interaction with a motor protein, myosin light chain 6 (MYL6), leading to phosphorylation of MLC and actin stress fiber formation. cGAS-MYL6-mediated MLC phosphorylation required calcium release and organization of an ER-Ca2+ sensor, Stromal Interaction Molecule 1 (STIM1) as puncta. Activated STIM1 also induced cGAS tyrosine phosphorylation at Y215/242 residues via cSrc. Interfering with MYL6 or cSrc expression impaired cGAS condensation and cGAMP generation. Liposome delivery of phosphodeficient cGAS (Y215/Y242àF215/F242) in EC of cGAS null mice blocked type1-IFN production during bacterial pneumonia. Our finding suggests that STIM1 is crucial in inducing cGAS activity and type1-IFN production. cGAS thus represents a novel target for inhibiting STING activation, thereby suppressing tissue injury and inflammation. NIH. This is the full abstract presented at the American Physiology Summit 2024 meeting and is only available in HTML format. There are no additional versions or additional content available for this abstract. Physiology was not involved in the peer review process.