Faulty DNA disposal system causes inflammation
Cells in the human body contain power-generating mitochondria, each with their own mtDNA—a unique set of genetic instructions that mitochondria use to create life-giving energy. When mtDNA remains where it belongs (inside mitochondria), it sustains both mitochondrial and cellular health; when it goes where it doesn’t belong, it can initiate an immune response that promotes inflammation. Now, Professor Gerald Shadel, Salk colleagues, and collaborators at UC San Diego and University of Virginia have discovered a mechanism that expels improperly functioning mtDNA from the mitochondria. When this happens, the mtDNA gets flagged as foreign DNA and activates an inflammatory pathway. This pathway is a promising target for new therapeutics that could disrupt or mitigate inflammation in aging or diseases like lupus or rheumatoid arthritis.
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