1. Academic Validation
  2. Cyclic di-nucleotide signaling enters the eukaryote domain

Cyclic di-nucleotide signaling enters the eukaryote domain

  • IUBMB Life. 2013 Nov;65(11):897-903. doi: 10.1002/iub.1212.
Pauline Schaap 1
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 College of Life Sciences, University of Dundee, Dundee, UK.
Abstract

Cyclic (c-di-GMP) is the prevalent intracellular signaling intermediate in bacteria. It triggers a spectrum of responses that cause bacteria to shift from a swarming motile phase to sessile biofilm formation. However, additional functions for c-di-GMP and roles for related molecules, such as c-di-AMP and c-AMP-GMP continue to be uncovered. The first usage of cyclic-di-nucleotide (c-di-NMP) signaling in the eukaryote domain emerged only recently. In dictyostelid social amoebas, c-di-GMP is a secreted signal that induces motile amoebas to differentiate into sessile stalk cells. In humans, c-di-NMPs, which are either produced endogenously in response to foreign DNA or by invading Bacterial pathogens, trigger the innate immune system by activating the expression of interferon genes. STING, the human c-di-NMP receptor, is conserved throughout metazoa and their closest unicellular relatives, suggesting protist origins for human c-di-NMP signaling. Compared to the limited number of conserved protein domains that detect the second messengers cAMP and cGMP, the domains that detect the c-di-NMPs are surprisingly varied.

Keywords

2′3′-cGAMP; Dictyostelium; STING; biofilm; cGAS; cyclic di-AMP; cyclic di-GMP; diadenylate cyclase; diguanylate cyclase; stalk cell differentiation.

Figures
Products