WSTF nuclear autophagy regulates chronic but not acute inflammation.

Publication date: Jul 02, 2025

Acute inflammation is an essential response that our bodies use to combat infections. However, in the absence of infections, chronic inflammation can have a pivotal role in the onset and progression of chronic diseases, such as arthritis, cancer, autoimmune disorders, metabolic-dysfunction-associated steatohepatitis (MASH), and most ageing-associated pathologies. The underlying mechanisms that distinguish chronic inflammation from its acute counterpart remain unclear, posing challenges to the development of targeted therapies for these major diseases. Here we identify a mechanism that separates the two responses: during chronic but not acute inflammation, chromatin remodelling is influenced by nuclear autophagy, in which the WSTF protein of the ISWI chromatin-remodelling complex interacts with the ATG8 autophagy protein family in the nucleus. This interaction leads to WSTF nuclear export and subsequent degradation by autophagosomes and lysosomes in the cytoplasm. Loss of WSTF leads to chromatin opening over inflammatory genes, amplifying inflammation. Cell-penetrating peptides that block the WSTF-ATG8 interaction do not affect acute inflammation but suppress chronic inflammation in senescence as well as in MASH and osteoarthritis in mouse models and patient samples. The ability to specifically target chronic inflammation without blunting acute inflammation offers an approach for treating common chronic inflammatory diseases.

Concepts Keywords
Arthritis Acute
Autophagosomesandlysosomes Associated
Cancer Atg8
Common Autophagy
Remodelling Chromatin
Chronic
Diseases
Infections
Inflammation
Inflammatory
Interaction
Leads
Nuclear
Remodelling
Wstf

Semantics

Type Source Name
pathway REACTOME Autophagy
disease MESH inflammation
disease MESH infections
disease MESH chronic diseases
disease MESH arthritis
disease MESH cancer
disease MESH steatohepatitis
disease MESH osteoarthritis

Original Article

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