Interrogating Host Antiviral Environments Driven by Nuclear DNA Sensing: A Multiomic Perspective
Abstract
1. Introduction
2. DNA Sensor Identification and Characterization through the Lens of Proteomics
2.1. DNA Sensor Molecular Interactions Drive Host Antiviral and Virus Immune Evasion Mechanisms
2.2. Post-Translational Modifications for Finely Tuning DNA Sensor Function
3. Defining the Cellular Landscape Representative of Immune Activation
4. The Missing Link: Genomics for Understanding the Viral DNA–DNA Sensor Interface
5. Concluding Remarks
Author Contributions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Strategy | Advantages | Disadvantages | Purpose | Application | References |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
AP-MS isolating DNA | Unbiased detection of proteins bound to DNA or to DNA sensor; high sensitivity; enrichment of proteins of interest; ability to detect multiple PTM types | Could miss transient interactions; does not discriminate between direct and indirect interactions; nonspecific interactions are possible | Identify DNA sensors | IFI16, hnRNPA2B1 | [9,17] |
IP-MS isolating DNA sensors | Identify DNA sensors | IFIX | [12] | ||
Interactome | IFI16, IFIX, cGAS, hnRNPA2B1 | [12,15,17,29,33,50,51] | |||
PTMs | IFI16, cGAS | [10,52,53] | |||
Shotgun MS (whole proteome) | High throughput, unbiased, high sensitivity | Complex datasets; computationally intensive; possible missing values in quantitative proteome measurements | Identify DNA sensors | cGAS | [13] |
Proteome | cGAS | [51] | |||
Secretome | Herpesvirus infection | [54] | |||
Metabolome | Herpesvirus infection | [55] | |||
Targeted MS | High accuracy and sensitivity; specific detection; requires low sample amount | Needs prior detection or defining signature detection parameters; needs specialized MS instrumentation | Protein abundance | Immune factor quantification | [51] |
Confirmation of protein interactions | cGAS, IFI16 | [14,29] | |||
PTMs | cGAS | [53] | |||
Small molecule detection | cGAMP | [13] | |||
DNA microarrays | High throughput; inexpensive; customizable to detect specific sequences and isoforms | High background noise; requires high sample amount; biased approach | Transcriptome | Herpesvirus infection | [56] |
RNA sequencing | High throughput; unbiased; requires low sample amount; single base resolution | Requires library preparation; computationally intensive; expensive | Transcriptome | IFI16 (mouse homolog) | [57] |
DNA Sensor | Modification | Residues | Reference in Which First Identified |
---|---|---|---|
IFI16 | Acetylation | K45, K99, K128, K214, K444, K451, K505, K542, K558 | [10] |
Phosphorylation | S95, S106, S153, S168, S174, S724 | [10] | |
S575 | [73] | ||
SUMOylation | K116, K561 | [74] | |
K128 | [75] | ||
K683 | [76] | ||
cGAS | Acetylation | K7, K50, K384, K392, K394, K414 | [52] |
K198, K285, K292, K355, K432, K479 | [53] | ||
Deamidation | N196, N377, Q436, Q439 in mice (N210, N389, Q451, Q454 in human) | [39] | |
Glutamylation | E272 (poly), E302 (mono) | [77] | |
Phosphorylation | S37, S116, S201, S221, S263 | [53] | |
S143 | [73] | ||
Y215 | [16] | ||
S305 | [78] | ||
SUMOylation | K217 and K464 in mice (K231 and K479 in human) | [79] | |
Ubiquitination | K271 and K464 (poly) in mice | [79] | |
K335 (mono) | [70] | ||
hnRNPA2B1 | Acetylation | M1 | [80] |
K168, K173 | [81] | ||
Demethylation | R226 | [17] | |
Methylation | R203, R213, R228, R238, R266, R325, R350 | [82] | |
Phosphorylation | T4, S29, T140, T159, T176, S189, S201, S212, S225, S259, S324, Y331, S341, S344 | [83] | |
S85, S212, S259, S344 | [84] | ||
S149, S231 | [73] | ||
S236 | [85] | ||
S347 | [86] | ||
SUMOylation | K22, K104, K112, K120, K137, K152, K168, K173 | [75] | |
K120, K186 | [74] |
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Howard, T.R.; Cristea, I.M. Interrogating Host Antiviral Environments Driven by Nuclear DNA Sensing: A Multiomic Perspective. Biomolecules 2020, 10, 1591. https://doi.org/10.3390/biom10121591
Howard TR, Cristea IM. Interrogating Host Antiviral Environments Driven by Nuclear DNA Sensing: A Multiomic Perspective. Biomolecules. 2020; 10(12):1591. https://doi.org/10.3390/biom10121591
Chicago/Turabian StyleHoward, Timothy R., and Ileana M. Cristea. 2020. "Interrogating Host Antiviral Environments Driven by Nuclear DNA Sensing: A Multiomic Perspective" Biomolecules 10, no. 12: 1591. https://doi.org/10.3390/biom10121591
APA StyleHoward, T. R., & Cristea, I. M. (2020). Interrogating Host Antiviral Environments Driven by Nuclear DNA Sensing: A Multiomic Perspective. Biomolecules, 10(12), 1591. https://doi.org/10.3390/biom10121591