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. 2022 Jun 22;18(9):558–572. doi: 10.1038/s41581-022-00589-6

Table 2.

Organ-specific diseases associated with cGAS–STING activation in humans or mice

Disease names and/or affected tissues Mouse models Human diseases
ALS Loss or blockade of STING rescued ALS phenotype In Prp-TDP-43Tg/+ mice133 cGAMP detected in iPSC-derived motor neurons from patients with TARDBP mutations; increased cGAMP concentrations in spinal cord extracts from patients with ALS133
PD Lack of PINK1 or parkin led to oxidation of mtDNA and cGAS–STING activation135 PINK1 or PRKN mutations associate with early-onset PD134
AD NAD+ supplementation reduced neuroinflammation by suppressing cGAS–STING137 NA
Kidney disease Cisplatin-induced tubular injury was attenuated by STING deficiency and inhibition5. Blocking STING trafficking from the ER improved glomerular pathology scores122 cGAS and STING expression correlated with kidney fibrosis in patients with CKD7. cGAS–STING pathway implicated in diabetic kidney disease116
Intestinal inflammation and microbiome

STING deficiency or antagonism exacerbates gut inflammation142,144,146

STING contributes to gut microbial homeostasis143

Constitutive STING activation leads to dysbiosis and intestinal inflammation145

Increased STING levels in the colon of patients with ulcerative colitis145
Familial chilblain lupus, UV skin responses, skin microbiome and acne

Skin colonization with S. epidermidis led to cGAS–STING activation in keratinocytes140

UV light induces a IFN-I signature dependent on cGAS–STING106,107

Cutibacterium acnes associated with acne vulgaris stimulates IFN-I production in macrophages via cGAS–STING149
Myocardial infarction, heart failure cGAS- or STING-deficient mice are protected against myocardial infarction181,182. cGAS has an essential pathogenic role in pressure overload-induced heart failure182 NA
Viral hepatitis HBV evades immune sensing by inhibiting cGAS–STING expression and signalling183 Decreased STING expression in peripheral blood of patients with HBV infection184
NAFLD and NASH Reduced liver injury in mice with impaired STING and high fat diet-induced NAFLD185. Macrophage activation via STING stimulates hepatocyte fat deposition and activates hepatic stellate cells186, possibly through sensing of mtDNA187 Increased STING levels in livers of patients with NAFLD186,188
ALD

Ethanol-triggered ER stress causes activation of cGAS–STING58, STING-mediated apoptosis of hepatocytes189, and liver injury and fibrosis190

cGAMP transport through hepatic gap junctions amplifies tissue injury58

Increased cGAS–STING activation in the liver of patients with ALD58
Obesity

In DsbA-L KO, cGAS–STING activation suppresses thermogenesis and stimulates metabolic disorder117,191

High-fat diet causes metabolic stress and STING activation via mtDNA; STING deficiency partially prevented inflammation of adipose tissue, insulin resistance and obesity192

NA
Arthritis

Sting1 loss protects Dnase2−/−Ifnar−/− mice from arthritis193

cGAS activation by self DNA causes arthritis in Dnase2−/−Ifnar1−/− mice65

TNF induces release of mtDNA, which activates cGAS; Cgas KO mice are protected from arthritis in the K/BxN arthritis model194

NA

AD, Alzheimer disease; ALD, alcoholic liver disease; ALS, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis; cGAMP, 2′,3′-cyclic GMP–AMP; cGAS, cyclic GMP–AMP synthase; CKD, chronic kidney disease; ER, endoplasmic reticulum; HBV, hepatitis B virus; IFN-I, type I interferon; iPSCs, induced pluripotent stem cells; KO, knockout; mtDNA, mitochondrial DNA; NA, not available; NAFLD, non-alcoholic fatty liver disease; NASH, non-alcoholic steatohepatitis; PD, Parkinson disease; STING, stimulator of interferon genes; TNF, tumour necrosis factor; UV, ultraviolet. cGAS involvement in microbial infections is discussed in the main text.