A choanoflagellate cGLR-STING pathway reveals evolutionary links between bacterial and animal immunity
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Animal innate immunity evolved from ancient pathways in bacterial anti-phage defense. How bacterial immune components were first acquired and adapted within eukaryotic cells remains poorly understood. Here we identify a complete cGLR-STING signaling axis in choanoflagellates, the closest living relatives of animals, that exhibits a mosaic of features from both bacterial and animal immunity. Comparative genomics reveals choanoflagellate cGLR and STING genes organized in operon-like arrangements reminiscent of bacterial defense loci. Reconstitution of choanoflagellate cGLR-STING signaling in vitro demonstrates that activation occurs through the conserved nucleotide immune signal 2′3′-cGAMP. Structural analysis of a choanoflagellate STING–2′3′-cGAMP complex explains how retention of bacterial-like features in early eukaryotic proteins shapes ligand specificity and receptor activation. We analyze cGLR and STING evolution in unicellular eukaryotes and identify further STING homologs in choanoflagellates and fungi that support additional independent acquisition events. Our results reveal molecular fossils that bridge bacterial and animal immunity and illuminate early eukaryotic immune system evolution.