Abstract
The invasion of mammalian cytoplasm by microbial DNA from infectious pathogens or by self DNA from the nucleus or mitochondria represents a danger signal that alerts the host immune system1. Cyclic GMP–AMP synthase (cGAS) is a sensor of cytoplasmic DNA that activates the type-I interferon pathway2. On binding to DNA, cGAS is activated to catalyse the synthesis of cyclic GMP–AMP (cGAMP) from GTP and ATP3. cGAMP functions as a second messenger that binds to and activates stimulator of interferon genes (STING)3,4,5,6,7,8,9. STING then recruits and activates tank-binding kinase 1 (TBK1), which phosphorylates STING and the transcription factor IRF3 to induce type-I interferons and other cytokines10,11. However, how cGAMP-bound STING activates TBK1 and IRF3 is not understood. Here we present the cryo-electron microscopy structure of human TBK1 in complex with cGAMP-bound, full-length chicken STING. The structure reveals that the C-terminal tail of STING adopts a β-strand-like conformation and inserts into a groove between the kinase domain of one TBK1 subunit and the scaffold and dimerization domain of the second subunit in the TBK1 dimer. In this binding mode, the phosphorylation site Ser366 in the STING tail cannot reach the kinase-domain active site of bound TBK1, which suggests that STING phosphorylation by TBK1 requires the oligomerization of both proteins. Mutational analyses validate the interaction mode between TBK1 and STING and support a model in which high-order oligomerization of STING and TBK1, induced by cGAMP, leads to STING phosphorylation by TBK1.
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Acknowledgements
We thank H. Yu and R. Hibbs for sharing instruments and reagents, and X. Tan for contributing to the analysis of some STING mutants. Cryo-EM data were collected at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center (UTSW) Cryo-Electron Microscopy Facility, which is funded by the Cancer Prevention and Research Institute of Texas (CPRIT) Core Facility Support Award RP170644. We thank D. Nicastro for facility access and data acquisition. This work is supported in part by the Howard Hughes Medical Institute (Z.J.C.), grants from the National Institutes of Health (GM088197 and R35GM130289 to X.Z), grants from the Welch foundation (I-1389 to Z.J.C.; I-1702 to X.Z; I-1944 to X.-c.B) and grants from CPRIT (RP150498 to Z.J.C.; RP160082 to X.-c.B.). X.-c.B. and X.Z. are Virginia Murchison Linthicum Scholars in Medical Research at UTSW. Z.J.C. is an investigator of the Howard Hughes Medical Institute.
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Nature thanks Andrea Ablasser, Philip Kranzusch and Osamu Nureki for their contribution to the peer review of this work.
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All authors participated in research design, data analyses and manuscript preparation; G.S. and C.Z. prepared the protein samples for cryo-EM; X.-c.B., G.S. and X.Z. performed data acquisition, image processing, structure determination and analyses; C.Z. and X.G. did functional assays under the supervision of Z.J.C.
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Extended data figures and tables
Extended Data Fig. 1 Purification of STING and TBK1, and characterization of their interaction.
a, Binding between purified human STING and TBK1. Tsi3-tagged TBK1 was captured by Tse3-conjugated beads. Pull-down of STING by TBK1 was assessed by western blot. IB, immunoblotting; STING-FL, full-length STING; STING-Δtail, STING(1–343). b, Both human and chicken STING are able to induce phosphorylation of human TBK1 in cells. HeLa-C9 cells with undetectable endogenous STING were used to generate cell lines that stably expressed human STING–Flag or chicken STING–Flag. Cells were stimulated with cGAMP (1 μM) and analysed for TBK1 phosphorylation by immunoblotting. c, Gel filtration chromatography of the hybrid complex between chicken STING and human TBK1. Data are representative of two independent experiments.
Extended Data Figure 2 Flow chart of cryo-EM image processing for the complex between chicken STING and human TBK1.
a, Representative micrograph. b, Representative 2D classes of the intact complex. c, Representative 2D classes from TBK1-focused image processing. n > 3. d, f, Final reconstructions of the intact STING–TBK1 complex (d) and from the TBK1-focused refinement (f), with colours based on local resolution. e, g, Gold-standard FSC curves of the final 3D reconstructions of the intact complex and from the TBK1-focused refinement. h, Image-processing procedure.
Extended Data Fig. 3 Sample density maps.
Sample density maps are shown for the C-terminal tail of chicken STING and various parts of human TBK1.
Extended Data Fig. 4 Structural comparison of apo TBK1 (PDB code 4IM0) and TBK1 bound to STING.
a, Overall TBK1 structures. b, A zoomed-in view of TBK1 regions bound to the STING C-terminal tail.
Extended Data Fig. 5 Sequence conservation of TBK1 from human and chicken.
Residues that are identical in the TBK1 of both species are coloured grey. Non-conserved residues are coloured red; non-identical, but similar, residues are coloured pink.
Extended Data Fig. 6 The binding and phosphorylation of STING by TBK1 relies on the interface between TBK1 and the STING C-terminal tail, and on the oligomerization of STING.
a, Mutations of TBK1-binding residues in the STING tail diminish cGAMP-induced phosphorylation of both TBK1 and STING. The S1 post-nuclear supernatant from HEK293T cells that expressed either the STING wild type or mutants was incubated with ATP in the presence or absence of cGAMP, and subjected to immunoblotting analyses for pTBK1, pSTING and STING. b, c, Mutations of TBK1-binding residues in the STING tail diminish cGAMP-induced STING phosphorylation (b) but not STING oligomerization (c). The same samples as in a were resolved by native gels, and analysed by immunoblotting. d–f, Mutations at the oligomerization interface of STING reduce cGAMP-induced oligomerization of STING, as well as phosphorylation of TBK1 and STING. The mutants are based on the accompanying paper on the structures of full-length STING12. The analyses in d, e and f were conducted in the same manner as those in a, b and c, respectively. Data shown here are representative of at least three independent biological replicates.
Extended Data Fig. 7 Cartoon model of STING-mediated activation of TBK1 and the downstream signalling pathway.
The cGAMP-induced oligomerization of STING leads to TBK1 clustering and trans-autophosphorylation. Activated TBK1 phosphorylates STING C-terminal tails that are not bound to the SDD–kinase domain groove in TBK1. Phosphorylated tails of STING recruit IRF3, which is phosphorylated by TBK1. Phosphorylated IRF3 forms a dimer and translocates to the nucleus to initiate the transcription of IFN genes.
Extended Data Fig. 8 Data collection and model statistics.
a, Data collection and model refinement statistics. b, FSC curves between the maps and model.
Supplementary information
Supplementary Information
This file contains Supplementary Results: Functional conservation between human and chicken STING.
Supplementary Figures
Supplementary Figure 1: Original uncropped images of gels or blots.
Video 1
Zoomed-in view of the interface between the STING C-terminal tail and TBK1.
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Zhang, C., Shang, G., Gui, X. et al. Structural basis of STING binding with and phosphorylation by TBK1. Nature 567, 394–398 (2019). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-019-1000-2
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-019-1000-2
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