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RNA N-glycosylation enables immune evasion and homeostatic efferocytosis

Author

Listed:
  • Vincent R. Graziano

    (UConn Health School of Medicine)

  • Jennifer Porat

    (Boston Children’s Hospital)

  • Marie Dominique Ah Kioon

    (Hospital for Special Surgery)

  • Ivana Mejdrová

    (Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität (LMU) München)

  • Alyssa J. Matz

    (UConn Health School of Medicine)

  • Charlotta G. Lebedenko

    (Boston Children’s Hospital)

  • Peiyuan Chai

    (Boston Children’s Hospital)

  • John V. Pluvinage

    (San Francisco (UCSF)
    UCSF)

  • Rafael Ricci-Azevedo

    (UConn Health School of Medicine)

  • Andrew G. Harrison

    (UConn Health School of Medicine)

  • Skylar S. Wright

    (UConn Health School of Medicine)

  • Xinzheng Wang

    (UConn Health School of Medicine)

  • Madison S. Strine

    (Yale School of Medicine)

  • Penghua Wang

    (UConn Health School of Medicine)

  • Michael R. Wilson

    (San Francisco (UCSF)
    UCSF)

  • Sivapriya Kailasan Vanaja

    (UConn Health School of Medicine)

  • Beiyan Zhou

    (UConn Health School of Medicine
    University of Connecticut)

  • Franck J. Barrat

    (Hospital for Special Surgery
    Weill Cornell Medical College of Cornell University)

  • Thomas Carell

    (Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität (LMU) München)

  • Ryan A. Flynn

    (Boston Children’s Hospital
    Harvard University
    Harvard University)

  • Vijay A. Rathinam

    (UConn Health School of Medicine)

Abstract

Glycosylation is central to the localization and function of biomolecules1. We recently discovered that small RNAs undergo N-glycosylation2 at the modified RNA base 3-(3-amino-3-carboxypropyl) uridine (acp3U)3. However, the functional significance of N-glycosylation of RNAs is unknown. Here we show that the N-glycans on glycoRNAs prevent innate immune sensing of endogenous small RNAs. We found that de-N-glycosylation of cell-culture-derived and circulating human and mouse glycoRNA elicited potent inflammatory responses including the production of type I interferons in a Toll-like receptor 3- and Toll-like receptor 7-dependent manner. Furthermore, we show that N-glycans on cell surface RNAs prevent apoptotic cells from triggering endosomal RNA sensors in efferocytes, thus facilitating the non-inflammatory clearance of dead cells. Mechanistically, N-glycans conceal the hypermodified uracil base acp3U, which we identified as immunostimulatory when exposed in RNA. Consistent with this, genetic deletion of an enzyme (DTWD2) that synthesizes acp3U abrogated innate immune activation by de-N-glycosylated small RNAs and apoptotic cells. Furthermore, synthetic acp3U-containing RNAs are sufficient to trigger innate immune responses. Thus, our study has uncovered a natural mechanism by which N-glycans block RNAs from inducing acp3U-dependent innate immune activation, demonstrating how glycoRNAs exist on the cell surface and in the endosomal network without inducing autoinflammatory responses.

Suggested Citation

  • Vincent R. Graziano & Jennifer Porat & Marie Dominique Ah Kioon & Ivana Mejdrová & Alyssa J. Matz & Charlotta G. Lebedenko & Peiyuan Chai & John V. Pluvinage & Rafael Ricci-Azevedo & Andrew G. Harriso, 2025. "RNA N-glycosylation enables immune evasion and homeostatic efferocytosis," Nature, Nature, vol. 645(8081), pages 784-792, September.
  • Handle: RePEc:nat:nature:v:645:y:2025:i:8081:d:10.1038_s41586-025-09310-6
    DOI: 10.1038/s41586-025-09310-6
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