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DNA‑Protein Crosslinks Activate cGAS‑STING, Causing Premature Aging and Embryonic Lethality in Mice

Blocking innate‑immune signaling during development reduced these effects in SPRTN‑mutant mice.

Overview

  • The Science study identifies unrepaired DNA‑protein crosslinks as upstream triggers of a chronic inflammatory program that drives degenerative aging phenotypes.
  • Researchers show that the SPRTN protease repairs these crosslinks during DNA replication and mitosis, expanding its known role in genome maintenance.
  • In cell systems, SPRTN loss led to persistent crosslinks, chromosome segregation errors, micronuclei, and cytosolic DNA that activated the cGAS‑STING pathway.
  • A mouse model carrying an RJALS‑associated SPRTN mutation exhibited accumulated crosslinks, strong interferon responses, reduced body size, craniofacial and eye defects, and premature hair graying, with some abnormalities originating in embryogenesis.
  • Genetic or pharmacologic cGAS‑STING inhibition from early development prevented developmental lethality and lessened premature‑aging traits, though rescue was incomplete and remains a preclinical finding.