Intracellular nucleic acid detection in autoimmunity

JT Crowl, EE Gray, K Pestal… - Annual review of …, 2017 - annualreviews.org
JT Crowl, EE Gray, K Pestal, HE Volkman, DB Stetson
Annual review of immunology, 2017annualreviews.org
Protective immune responses to viral infection are initiated by innate immune sensors that
survey extracellular and intracellular space for foreign nucleic acids. The existence of these
sensors raises fundamental questions about self/nonself discrimination because of the
abundance of self-DNA and self-RNA that occupy these same compartments. Recent
advances have revealed that enzymes that metabolize or modify endogenous nucleic acids
are essential for preventing inappropriate activation of the innate antiviral response. In this …
Protective immune responses to viral infection are initiated by innate immune sensors that survey extracellular and intracellular space for foreign nucleic acids. The existence of these sensors raises fundamental questions about self/nonself discrimination because of the abundance of self-DNA and self-RNA that occupy these same compartments. Recent advances have revealed that enzymes that metabolize or modify endogenous nucleic acids are essential for preventing inappropriate activation of the innate antiviral response. In this review, we discuss rare human diseases caused by dysregulated nucleic acid sensing, focusing primarily on intracellular sensors of nucleic acids. We summarize lessons learned from these disorders, we rationalize the existence of these diseases in the context of evolution, and we propose that this framework may also apply to a number of more common autoimmune diseases for which the underlying genetics and mechanisms are not yet fully understood.
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