Sensing of transposable elements by the antiviral innate immune system
Metadata
Show full item recordEditorial
Cold Spring Harbor
Materia
Mobile genetic elements Transposable elements Type I interferon Nucleic acid sensing Antiviral immunity
Date
2021-04-22Referencia bibliográfica
Gázquez-Gutiérrez, A... [et al.] (2021). Sensing of transposable elements by the antiviral innate immune system. RNA, 27(7), 735-752. doi:[10.1261/rna.078721.121]
Sponsorship
Wellcome Trust; European Commission 107665/Z/15/Z; Royal Society of London RGS\R1\191368; MINECO SAF2015-71589-P; Spanish Government RYC-2016-21395Abstract
Around half of the genomes in mammals are composed of transposable elements (TEs) such as DNA transposons and retrotransposons.
Several mechanisms have evolved to prevent their activity and the detrimental impact of their insertional mutagenesis.
Despite these potentially negative effects, TEs are essential drivers of evolution, and in certain settings,
beneficial to their hosts. For instance, TEs have rewired the antiviral gene regulatory network and are required for early
embryonic development. However, due to structural similarities between TE-derived and viral nucleic acids, cells can misidentify
TEs as invading viruses and trigger the major antiviral innate immune pathway, the type I interferon (IFN) response.
This review will focus on the different settings in which the role of TE-mediated IFN activation has been documented, including
cancer and senescence. Importantly, TEs may also play a causative role in the development of complex autoimmune
diseases characterized by constitutive type I IFN activation. All these observations suggest the presence of strong but opposing
forces driving the coevolution of TEs and antiviral defense. A better biological understanding of the TE replicative
cycle as well as of the antiviral nucleic acid sensing mechanisms will provide insights into how these two biological processes
interact and will help to design better strategies to treat human diseases characterized by aberrant TE expression and/
or type I IFN activation.