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Recombinant Human cGAS protein is a Human Fragment protein, in the 161 to 522 aa range, expressed in Escherichia coli, with >=90% purity and suitable for SDS-PAGE.

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Images

SDS-PAGE - Recombinant Human cGAS protein (AB289781), expandable thumbnail

Key facts

Purity
>=90% SDS-PAGE
Expression system
Escherichia coli
Tags
His tag N-Terminus
Applications
SDS-PAGE
Biologically active
No

Amino acid sequence

G A S K L R A V L E K L K L S R D D I S T A A G M V K G V V D H L L L R L K C D S A F R G V G L L N T G S Y Y E H V K I S A P N E F D V M F K L E V P R I Q L E E Y S N T R A Y Y F V K F K R N P K E N P L S Q F L E G E I L S A S K M L S K F R K I I K E E I N D I K D T D V I M K R K R G G S P A V T L L I S E K I S V D I T L A L E S K S S W P A S T Q E G L R I Q N W L S A K V R K Q L R L K P F Y L V P K H A K E G N G F Q E E T W R L S F S H I E K E I L N N H G K S K T C C E N K E E K C C R K D C L K L M K Y L L E Q L K E R F K D K K H L D K F S S Y H V K T A F F H V C T Q N P Q D S Q W D R K D L G L C F D N C V T Y F L Q C L R T E K L E N Y F I P E F N L F S S N L I D K R S K E F L T K Q I E Y E R N N E F P V F D E F

Reactivity data

Application
SDS-PAGE
Reactivity
Reacts
Dilution info
-
Notes

-

Target data

Function

Nucleotidyltransferase that catalyzes the formation of cyclic GMP-AMP (2',3'-cGAMP) from ATP and GTP and plays a key role in innate immunity (PubMed:21478870, PubMed:23258413, PubMed:23707061, PubMed:23707065, PubMed:23722159, PubMed:24077100, PubMed:24116191, PubMed:24462292, PubMed:25131990, PubMed:26300263, PubMed:29976794, PubMed:30799039, PubMed:31142647, PubMed:32814054, PubMed:33273464, PubMed:33542149, PubMed:37217469, PubMed:37802025). Catalysis involves both the formation of a 2',5' phosphodiester linkage at the GpA step and the formation of a 3',5' phosphodiester linkage at the ApG step, producing c[G(2',5')pA(3',5')p] (PubMed:28214358, PubMed:28363908). Acts as a key DNA sensor: directly binds double-stranded DNA (dsDNA), inducing the formation of liquid-like droplets in which CGAS is activated, leading to synthesis of 2',3'-cGAMP, a second messenger that binds to and activates STING1, thereby triggering type-I interferon production (PubMed:28314590, PubMed:28363908, PubMed:29976794, PubMed:32817552, PubMed:33230297, PubMed:33606975, PubMed:35322803, PubMed:35438208, PubMed:35460603, PubMed:35503863). Preferentially recognizes and binds curved long dsDNAs of a minimal length of 40 bp (PubMed:30007416). Acts as a key foreign DNA sensor, the presence of double-stranded DNA (dsDNA) in the cytoplasm being a danger signal that triggers the immune responses (PubMed:28363908). Has antiviral activity by sensing the presence of dsDNA from DNA viruses in the cytoplasm (PubMed:28363908). Also acts as an innate immune sensor of infection by retroviruses, such as HIV-2, by detecting the presence of reverse-transcribed DNA in the cytosol (PubMed:23929945, PubMed:24269171, PubMed:30270045, PubMed:32852081). In contrast, HIV-1 is poorly sensed by CGAS, due to its capsid that cloaks viral DNA from CGAS detection (PubMed:24269171, PubMed:30270045, PubMed:32852081). Detection of retroviral reverse-transcribed DNA in the cytosol may be indirect and be mediated via interaction with PQBP1, which directly binds reverse-transcribed retroviral DNA (PubMed:26046437). Also detects the presence of DNA from bacteria, such as M.tuberculosis (PubMed:26048138). 2',3'-cGAMP can be transferred from producing cells to neighboring cells through gap junctions, leading to promote STING1 activation and convey immune response to connecting cells (PubMed:24077100). 2',3'-cGAMP can also be transferred between cells by virtue of packaging within viral particles contributing to IFN-induction in newly infected cells in a cGAS-independent but STING1-dependent manner (PubMed:26229115). Also senses the presence of neutrophil extracellular traps (NETs) that are translocated to the cytosol following phagocytosis, leading to synthesis of 2',3'-cGAMP (PubMed:33688080). In addition to foreign DNA, can also be activated by endogenous nuclear or mitochondrial DNA (PubMed:28738408, PubMed:28759889, PubMed:31299200, PubMed:33031745, PubMed:33230297). When self-DNA leaks into the cytosol during cellular stress (such as mitochondrial stress, SARS-CoV-2 infection causing severe COVID-19 disease, DNA damage, mitotic arrest or senescence), or is present in form of cytosolic micronuclei, CGAS is activated leading to a state of sterile inflammation (PubMed:28738408, PubMed:28759889, PubMed:31299200, PubMed:33031745, PubMed:33230297, PubMed:35045565). Acts as a regulator of cellular senescence by binding to cytosolic chromatin fragments that are present in senescent cells, leading to trigger type-I interferon production via STING1 and promote cellular senescence (By similarity). Also involved in the inflammatory response to genome instability and double-stranded DNA breaks: acts by localizing to micronuclei arising from genome instability (PubMed:28738408, PubMed:28759889). Micronuclei, which are frequently found in cancer cells, consist of chromatin surrounded by their own nuclear membrane: following breakdown of the micronuclear envelope, a process associated with chromothripsis, CGAS binds self-DNA exposed to the cytosol, leading to 2',3'-cGAMP synthesis and subsequent activation of STING1 and type-I interferon production (PubMed:28738408, PubMed:28759889). Activated in response to prolonged mitotic arrest, promoting mitotic cell death (PubMed:31299200). In a healthy cell, CGAS is however kept inactive even in cellular events that directly expose it to self-DNA, such as mitosis, when cGAS associates with chromatin directly after nuclear envelope breakdown or remains in the form of postmitotic persistent nuclear cGAS pools bound to chromatin (PubMed:31299200, PubMed:33542149). Nuclear CGAS is inactivated by chromatin via direct interaction with nucleosomes, which block CGAS from DNA binding and thus prevent CGAS-induced autoimmunity (PubMed:31299200, PubMed:32911482, PubMed:32912999, PubMed:33051594, PubMed:33542149). Also acts as a suppressor of DNA repair in response to DNA damage: inhibits homologous recombination repair by interacting with PARP1, the CGAS-PARP1 interaction leading to impede the formation of the PARP1-TIMELESS complex (PubMed:30356214, PubMed:31544964). In addition to DNA, also sense translation stress: in response to translation stress, translocates to the cytosol and associates with collided ribosomes, promoting its activation and triggering type-I interferon production (PubMed:34111399). In contrast to other mammals, human CGAS displays species-specific mechanisms of DNA recognition and produces less 2',3'-cGAMP, allowing a more fine-tuned response to pathogens (PubMed:30007416).

Alternative names

Recommended products

Recombinant Human cGAS protein is a Human Fragment protein, in the 161 to 522 aa range, expressed in Escherichia coli, with >=90% purity and suitable for SDS-PAGE.

Key facts

Purity
>=90% SDS-PAGE
Expression system
Escherichia coli
Applications
SDS-PAGE
Accession
Q8N884-1
Animal free
Yes
Species
Human
Concentration
Loading...
Storage buffer

pH: 7.4 - 8
Constituents: 6% Trehalose, 2.9% Sodium chloride, 0.24% Tris

Sequence info

Amino acid sequence

G A S K L R A V L E K L K L S R D D I S T A A G M V K G V V D H L L L R L K C D S A F R G V G L L N T G S Y Y E H V K I S A P N E F D V M F K L E V P R I Q L E E Y S N T R A Y Y F V K F K R N P K E N P L S Q F L E G E I L S A S K M L S K F R K I I K E E I N D I K D T D V I M K R K R G G S P A V T L L I S E K I S V D I T L A L E S K S S W P A S T Q E G L R I Q N W L S A K V R K Q L R L K P F Y L V P K H A K E G N G F Q E E T W R L S F S H I E K E I L N N H G K S K T C C E N K E E K C C R K D C L K L M K Y L L E Q L K E R F K D K K H L D K F S S Y H V K T A F F H V C T Q N P Q D S Q W D R K D L G L C F D N C V T Y F L Q C L R T E K L E N Y F I P E F N L F S S N L I D K R S K E F L T K Q I E Y E R N N E F P V F D E F
Accession
Q8N884
Protein length
Fragment
Predicted molecular weight
58.3 kDa
Amino acids
161 to 522
Nature
Recombinant
Tags
His tag N-Terminus

Specifications

Form
Lyophilized

General info

Function

Nucleotidyltransferase that catalyzes the formation of cyclic GMP-AMP (2',3'-cGAMP) from ATP and GTP and plays a key role in innate immunity (PubMed:21478870, PubMed:23258413, PubMed:23707061, PubMed:23707065, PubMed:23722159, PubMed:24077100, PubMed:24116191, PubMed:24462292, PubMed:25131990, PubMed:26300263, PubMed:29976794, PubMed:30799039, PubMed:31142647, PubMed:32814054, PubMed:33273464, PubMed:33542149, PubMed:37217469, PubMed:37802025). Catalysis involves both the formation of a 2',5' phosphodiester linkage at the GpA step and the formation of a 3',5' phosphodiester linkage at the ApG step, producing c[G(2',5')pA(3',5')p] (PubMed:28214358, PubMed:28363908). Acts as a key DNA sensor: directly binds double-stranded DNA (dsDNA), inducing the formation of liquid-like droplets in which CGAS is activated, leading to synthesis of 2',3'-cGAMP, a second messenger that binds to and activates STING1, thereby triggering type-I interferon production (PubMed:28314590, PubMed:28363908, PubMed:29976794, PubMed:32817552, PubMed:33230297, PubMed:33606975, PubMed:35322803, PubMed:35438208, PubMed:35460603, PubMed:35503863). Preferentially recognizes and binds curved long dsDNAs of a minimal length of 40 bp (PubMed:30007416). Acts as a key foreign DNA sensor, the presence of double-stranded DNA (dsDNA) in the cytoplasm being a danger signal that triggers the immune responses (PubMed:28363908). Has antiviral activity by sensing the presence of dsDNA from DNA viruses in the cytoplasm (PubMed:28363908). Also acts as an innate immune sensor of infection by retroviruses, such as HIV-2, by detecting the presence of reverse-transcribed DNA in the cytosol (PubMed:23929945, PubMed:24269171, PubMed:30270045, PubMed:32852081). In contrast, HIV-1 is poorly sensed by CGAS, due to its capsid that cloaks viral DNA from CGAS detection (PubMed:24269171, PubMed:30270045, PubMed:32852081). Detection of retroviral reverse-transcribed DNA in the cytosol may be indirect and be mediated via interaction with PQBP1, which directly binds reverse-transcribed retroviral DNA (PubMed:26046437). Also detects the presence of DNA from bacteria, such as M.tuberculosis (PubMed:26048138). 2',3'-cGAMP can be transferred from producing cells to neighboring cells through gap junctions, leading to promote STING1 activation and convey immune response to connecting cells (PubMed:24077100). 2',3'-cGAMP can also be transferred between cells by virtue of packaging within viral particles contributing to IFN-induction in newly infected cells in a cGAS-independent but STING1-dependent manner (PubMed:26229115). Also senses the presence of neutrophil extracellular traps (NETs) that are translocated to the cytosol following phagocytosis, leading to synthesis of 2',3'-cGAMP (PubMed:33688080). In addition to foreign DNA, can also be activated by endogenous nuclear or mitochondrial DNA (PubMed:28738408, PubMed:28759889, PubMed:31299200, PubMed:33031745, PubMed:33230297). When self-DNA leaks into the cytosol during cellular stress (such as mitochondrial stress, SARS-CoV-2 infection causing severe COVID-19 disease, DNA damage, mitotic arrest or senescence), or is present in form of cytosolic micronuclei, CGAS is activated leading to a state of sterile inflammation (PubMed:28738408, PubMed:28759889, PubMed:31299200, PubMed:33031745, PubMed:33230297, PubMed:35045565). Acts as a regulator of cellular senescence by binding to cytosolic chromatin fragments that are present in senescent cells, leading to trigger type-I interferon production via STING1 and promote cellular senescence (By similarity). Also involved in the inflammatory response to genome instability and double-stranded DNA breaks: acts by localizing to micronuclei arising from genome instability (PubMed:28738408, PubMed:28759889). Micronuclei, which are frequently found in cancer cells, consist of chromatin surrounded by their own nuclear membrane: following breakdown of the micronuclear envelope, a process associated with chromothripsis, CGAS binds self-DNA exposed to the cytosol, leading to 2',3'-cGAMP synthesis and subsequent activation of STING1 and type-I interferon production (PubMed:28738408, PubMed:28759889). Activated in response to prolonged mitotic arrest, promoting mitotic cell death (PubMed:31299200). In a healthy cell, CGAS is however kept inactive even in cellular events that directly expose it to self-DNA, such as mitosis, when cGAS associates with chromatin directly after nuclear envelope breakdown or remains in the form of postmitotic persistent nuclear cGAS pools bound to chromatin (PubMed:31299200, PubMed:33542149). Nuclear CGAS is inactivated by chromatin via direct interaction with nucleosomes, which block CGAS from DNA binding and thus prevent CGAS-induced autoimmunity (PubMed:31299200, PubMed:32911482, PubMed:32912999, PubMed:33051594, PubMed:33542149). Also acts as a suppressor of DNA repair in response to DNA damage: inhibits homologous recombination repair by interacting with PARP1, the CGAS-PARP1 interaction leading to impede the formation of the PARP1-TIMELESS complex (PubMed:30356214, PubMed:31544964). In addition to DNA, also sense translation stress: in response to translation stress, translocates to the cytosol and associates with collided ribosomes, promoting its activation and triggering type-I interferon production (PubMed:34111399). In contrast to other mammals, human CGAS displays species-specific mechanisms of DNA recognition and produces less 2',3'-cGAMP, allowing a more fine-tuned response to pathogens (PubMed:30007416).

Sequence similarities

Belongs to the mab-21 family.

Post-translational modifications

The N-terminal disordered part (1-160) is phosphorylated by AURKB during the G2-M transition, blocking CGAS liquid phase separation and preventing activation (PubMed:33542149). Phosphorylation at Tyr-215 by BLK promotes cytosolic retention (PubMed:30356214). Localizes into the nucleus following dephosphorylation at Tyr-215 (PubMed:30356214). Phosphorylation at Ser-435 activates the nucleotidyltransferase activity (PubMed:32474700). Dephosphorylation at Ser-435 by PPP6C impairs its ability to bind GTP, thereby inactivating it (PubMed:32474700). Phosphorylation at Thr-68 and Ser-213 by PRKDC inhibits its cyclic GMP-AMP synthase activity by impairing homodimerization and activation (PubMed:33273464). Phosphorylation at Ser-305 by AKT (AKT1, AKT2 or AKT3) suppresses the nucleotidyltransferase activity (PubMed:26440888). Phosphorylation at Ser-305 by CDK1 during mitosis leads to its inhibition, thereby preventing CGAS activation by self-DNA during mitosis (PubMed:32351706). Dephosphorylated at Ser-305 by protein phosphatase PP1 upon mitotic exit (PubMed:32351706).

Subcellular localisation
Nucleus

Storage

Shipped at conditions
Blue Ice
Appropriate short-term storage duration
1-2 weeks
Appropriate short-term storage conditions
+4°C
Appropriate long-term storage conditions
-20°C
Aliquoting information
Upon delivery aliquot
Storage information
Avoid freeze / thaw cycle

Supplementary info

This supplementary information is collated from multiple sources and compiled automatically.
Activity summary

The cyclic GMP-AMP synthase commonly referred to as cGAS functions as an enzyme that detects cytosolic DNA. It has a molecular weight of 50 kDa. This protein is widely expressed in various cell types with high expression in cells exposed to foreign DNA such as immune cells. cGAS acts by binding to cytosolic DNA which leads to the production of the secondary messenger cyclic GMP-AMP (cGAMP). This action is critical for initiating innate immune responses against viral infections and cellular stress.

Biological function summary

CGAS plays a fundamental role in the immune response by activating the STING pathway. cGAS when bound to DNA forms a complex with DNA as part of its mechanistic function which then catalyzes the synthesis of cGAMP. The cGAMP produced acts as a signaling molecule that activates the STING protein leading to subsequent immune signaling cascades. This activation results in the production of type I interferons and other inflammatory cytokines essential for mounting an effective antiviral response.

Pathways

CGAS operates within important signaling pathways such as the cGAS-STING pathway and the type I interferon pathway. This protein works closely with STING located on the endoplasmic reticulum as a direct effector. The connection between cGAS and STING is important in detecting and responding to cytosolic DNA and initiating immune signaling leading to activation of downstream transcription factors like IRF3 and NF-kB which promote gene expression driving immune responses.

Associated diseases and disorders

CGAS links to autoimmune diseases and cancer. Aberrant cGAS activity can lead to inappropriate immune activation contributing to autoimmune disorders such as lupus where the body attacks its own cells. In the case of cancer cGAS can play dual roles either promoting an immune response against tumors or contributing to an environment where cancer can evade immune detection. The relation between cGAS and diseases also involves STING as disruptions in this pathway can lead to alterations in immune surveillance and inflammation.

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  • SDS-PAGE - Recombinant Human cGAS protein (ab289781), expandable thumbnail

    SDS-PAGE - Recombinant Human cGAS protein (ab289781)

    SDS-PAGE analysis of ab289781

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