Author:
Ponnusamy Kanagaraju,Tzioni Maria Myrsini,Begum Murshida,Robinson Mark E,Caputo Valentina S,Katsarou Alexia,Trasanidis Nikolaos,Xiao Xiaolin,Kostopoulos Ioannis V,Iskander Deena,Roberts Irene,Trivedi Pritesh,Auner Holger W,Naresh Kikkeri,Chaidos Aristeidis,Karadimitris Anastasios
Abstract
Multiple myeloma is a malignancy of plasma cells (PC) initiated and driven by primary and secondary genetic events. Nevertheless, myeloma PC survival and proliferation might be sustained by non-genetic drivers. Z-DNA-binding protein 1 (ZBP1; also known as DAI) is an interferon-inducible, Z-nucleic acid sensor that triggers RIPK3-MLKL-mediated necroptosis in mice. ZBP1 also interacts with TBK1 and the transcription factor IRF3 but the function of this interaction is unclear, and the role of ZBP1-IRF3 axis in cancer is not known. Here we show that ZBP1 is selectively expressed in late B cell development in both human and mouse cells and it is required for optimal T-cell-dependent humoral immune responses. In myeloma PC, interaction of constitutively expressed ZBP1 with TBK1 and IRF3 results in IRF3 phosphorylation. IRF3 directly binds and activates cell cycle genes, in part through co-operation with the PC lineage-defining transcription factor IRF4, and thereby promoting myeloma cell proliferation. This generates a novel, potentially therapeutically targetable and relatively selective myeloma cell addiction to the ZBP1-IRF3 axis. Our data also show a non-canonical function of constitutive ZBP1 in human cells and expand our knowledge of the role of cellular immune sensors in cancer biology.
Publisher
Ferrata Storti Foundation (Haematologica)
Cited by
22 articles.
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