4.6 Article

Synthetic Oligodeoxynucleotides Containing Suppressive TTAGGG Motifs Inhibit AIM2 Inflammasome Activation

Journal

JOURNAL OF IMMUNOLOGY
Volume 191, Issue 7, Pages 3876-3883

Publisher

AMER ASSOC IMMUNOLOGISTS
DOI: 10.4049/jimmunol.1300530

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Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [AI083215, AI093752]

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Synthetic oligodeoxynucleotides (ODNs) comprised of the immunosuppressive motif TTAGGG block TLR9 signaling, prevent STAT1 and STAT4 phosphorylation and attenuate a variety of inflammatory responses in vivo. In this study, we demonstrate that such suppressive ODN abrogate activation of cytosolic nucleic acid-sensing pathways. Pretreatment of dendritic cells and macrophages with the suppressive ODN-A151 abrogated type I IFN, TNF-alpha, and ISG induction in response to cytosolic dsDNA. In addition, A151 abrogated caspase-1-dependent IL-1 beta and IL-18 maturation in dendritic cells stimulated with dsDNA and murine CMV. Inhibition was dependent on A151's phosphorothioate backbone, whereas substitution of the guanosine residues for adenosine negatively affected potency. A151 mediates these effects by binding to AIM2 in a manner that is competitive with immune-stimulatory DNA and as a consequence prevents AIM2 inflammasome complex formation. Collectively, these findings reveal a new route by which suppressive ODNs modulate the immune system and unveil novel applications for suppressive ODNs in the treatment of infectious and autoimmune diseases.

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