34 research outputs found

    Phosphorylation of Cytochrome c Threonine 28 Regulates Electron Transport Chain Activity in Kidney: Implications for AMP Kinase

    Get PDF
    Mammalian cytochrome c (Cytc) plays a key role in cellular life and death decisions, functioning as an electron carrier in the electron transport chain and as a trigger of apoptosis when released from the mitochondria. However, its regulation is not well understood. We show that the major fraction of Cytc iso- lated from kidneys is phosphorylated on Thr28, leading to a par- tial inhibition of respiration in the reaction with cytochrome c oxidase. To further study the effect of Cytc phosphorylation in vitro, we generated T28E phosphomimetic Cytc, revealing supe- rior behavior regarding protein stability and its ability to degrade reactive oxygen species compared with wild-type un- phosphorylated Cytc. Introduction of T28E phosphomimetic Cytc into Cytc knock-out cells shows that intact cell respiration, mitochondrial membrane potential (����m), and ROS levels are reduced compared with wild type. As we show by high resolu- tion crystallography of wild-type and T28E Cytc in combination with molecular dynamics simulations, Thr28 is located at a cen- tral position near the heme crevice, the most flexible epitope of the protein apart from the N and C termini. Finally, in silico prediction and our experimental data suggest that AMP kinase, which phosphorylates Cytc on Thr28 in vitro and colocalizes with Cytc to the mitochondrial intermembrane space in the kid- ney, is the most likely candidate to phosphorylate Thr28 in vivo. We conclude that Cytc phosphorylation is mediated in a tissue- specific manner and leads to regulation of electron transport chain flux via “controlled respiration,” preventing ����m hyperpolarization, a known cause of ROS and trigger of apoptosis

    Inhibition of Peroxidase Activity of Cytochrome c

    No full text

    NO● Represses the Oxygenation of Arachidonoyl PE by 15LOX/PEBP1: Mechanism and Role in Ferroptosis

    No full text
    We recently discovered an anti-ferroptotic mechanism inherent to M1 macrophages whereby high levels of NO● suppressed ferroptosis via inhibition of hydroperoxy-eicosatetraenoyl-phosphatidylethanolamine (HpETE-PE) production by 15-lipoxygenase (15LOX) complexed with PE-binding protein 1 (PEBP1). However, the mechanism of NO● interference with 15LOX/PEBP1 activity remained unclear. Here, we use a biochemical model of recombinant 15LOX-2 complexed with PEBP1, LC-MS redox lipidomics, and structure-based modeling and simulations to uncover the mechanism through which NO● suppresses ETE-PE oxidation. Our study reveals that O2 and NO● use the same entry pores and channels connecting to 15LOX-2 catalytic site, resulting in a competition for the catalytic site. We identified residues that direct O2 and NO● to the catalytic site, as well as those stabilizing the esterified ETE-PE phospholipid tail. The functional significance of these residues is supported by in silico saturation mutagenesis. We detected nitrosylated PE species in a biochemical system consisting of 15LOX-2/PEBP1 and NO● donor and in RAW264.7 M2 macrophages treated with ferroptosis-inducer RSL3 in the presence of NO●, in further support of the ability of NO● to diffuse to, and react at, the 15LOX-2 catalytic site. The results provide first insights into the molecular mechanism of repression of the ferroptotic Hp-ETE-PE production by NO●

    Elucidating the contribution of mitochondrial glutathione to ferroptosis in cardiomyocytes

    No full text
    Ferroptosis is a programmed iron-dependent cell death associated with peroxidation of lipids particularly, phospholipids. Several studies suggested a possible contribution of mitochondria to ferroptosis although the mechanisms underlying mitochondria-mediated ferroptotic pathways remain elusive. Reduced glutathione (GSH) is a central player in ferroptosis that is required for glutathione peroxidase 4 to eliminate oxidized phospholipids. Mitochondria do not produce GSH, and although the transport of GSH to mitochondria is not fully understood, two carrier proteins, the dicarboxylate carrier (DIC, SLC25A10) and the oxoglutarate carrier (OGC, SLC25A11) have been suggested to participate in GSH transport. Here, we elucidated the role of DIC and OGC as well as mitochondrial bioenergetics in ferroptosis in H9c2 cardioblasts. Results showed that mitochondria are highly sensitive to ferroptotic stimuli displaying fragmentation, and lipid peroxidation shortly after the onset of ferroptotic stimulus. Inhibition of electron transport chain complexes and oxidative phosphorylation worsened RSL3-induced ferroptosis. LC-MS/MS analysis revealed a dramatic increase in the levels of pro-ferroptotic oxygenated phosphatidylethanolamine species in mitochondria in response to RSL3 (ferroptosis inducer) and cardiac ischemia-reperfusion. Inhibition of DIC and OGC aggravated ferroptosis and increased mitochondrial ROS, membrane depolarization, and GSH depletion. Dihydrolipoic acid, an essential cofactor for several mitochondrial multienzyme complexes, attenuated ferroptosis and induced direct reduction of pro-ferroptotic peroxidized phospholipids to hydroxy-phospholipids in vitro. In conclusion, we suggest that ferroptotic stimuli diminishes mitochondrial bioenergetics and stimulates GSH depletion and glutathione peroxidase 4 inactivation leading to ferroptosis

    Unusual Peroxidase Activity of Polynitroxylated Pegylated Hemoglobin: Elimination of H\u3csub\u3e2\u3c/sub\u3eO\u3csub\u3e2\u3c/sub\u3e Coupled with Intramolecular Oxidation of Nitroxides

    No full text
    Polynitroxylated hemoglobin (Hb(AcTPO)12) has been developed as a hemoglobin-based oxygen carrier. While Hb(AcTPO)12 has been shown to exert beneficial effects in a number of models of oxidative injury, its peroxidase activity has not been characterized thus far. In the blood stream, Hb(AcTPO)12 undergoes reduction by ascorbate to its hydroxylamine form Hb(AcTPOH)12. Here we report that Hb(AcTPOH)12exhibits peroxidase activity where H2O2 is utilized for intramolecular oxidation of its TPOH residues to TPO. This represents an unusual redox-catalytic mechanism whereby reduction of H2O2 is achieved at the expense of reducing equivalents of ascorbate converted into those of Hb(AcTPOH)12, a new propensity that cannot be directly associated with ascorbate

    The Border in Ireland and Trade, Déjà vu time again!

    Get PDF
    During December’s general election campaign, PM Johnson promised that he had an “oven ready” withdrawal deal he’d agreed with the EU. As he claimed incessantly, the only impediment to its implementation was Parliament’s refusal to fulfil the will of the people. Support for the Conservatives, he faithfully assured potential voters, would “GetBrexit done”

    Mitochondrial NM23-H4/NDPK-D Supports Cardiolipin Signaling to Eliminate Depolarized Mitochondria by Mitophagy

    No full text
    International audienceThe well-established function of the hexameric intermembrane space protein, NDPK-D/NM23-H4, is phosphotransfer activity as a nucleoside diphosphate kinase. However, recent data revealed a second function in lipid signaling that is involved in mitophagy, a critical process for cell homeostasis. Externalization of the inner mitochondrial membrane phospholipid, cardiolipin (CL), to the mitochondrial surface was identified as a mitophageal signal, recognized by the microtubule-associated protein 1 light chain 3. Here we demonstrate that NDPK-D binds CL and facilitates its re-distribution to the outer mitochondrial membrane. We found that mitophagy induced by a protonophoric uncoupler, CCCP, caused externalization of CL to the surface of mitochondria in murine lung epithelial MLE-12 cells and human cervical adenocarcinoma HeLa cells. RNAi knockdown of endogenous NDPK-D decreased CCCP-induced CL externalization and mitochondrial degradation. A R90D NDPK-D mutant which does not bind CL was inactive in promoting mitophagy. In situ proximity ligation assay showed that mitophagy-inducing CL transfer activity of NDPK-D is closely associated with the dynamin-like GTPase OPA1, and OPA1 silencing favored NDPK-D supported CL transfer, implicating fission-fusion dynamics in mitophagy regulation

    A new thiol-independent mechanism of epithelial host defense against Pseudomonas aeruginosa: iNOS/NO• sabotage of theft-ferroptosis

    No full text
    Ferroptosis is a redox-driven type of regulated cell death program arising from maladaptation of three metabolic pathways: glutathione homeostasis, iron handling and lipid peroxidation. Though GSH/Gpx4 is the predominant system detoxifying phospholipid hydroperoxides (PLOOH) in mammalian cells, recently Gpx4-independent regulators of ferroptosis like ferroptosis suppressor protein 1 (FSP1) in resistant cancer lines and iNOS/NO• in M1 macrophages have been discovered. We previously reported that Pseudomonas aeruginosa (PA) utilizes its 15- lipoxygenase (pLoxA) to trigger ferroptotic death in epithelial cells by oxidizing the host arachidonoyl-phosphatidylethanolamine (ETE-PE) into pro-ferroptotic 15-hydroperoxy- arachidonyl-PE (15-HpETE-PE). Here we demonstrate that PA degrades the host GPx4 defense by activating the lysosomal chaperone-mediated autophagy (CMA). In response, the host stimulates the iNOS/NO•-driven anti-ferroptotic mechanism to stymie lipid peroxidation and protect GPx4/GSH-deficient cells. By using a co-culture model system, we showed that macrophage-produced NO• can distantly prevent PA stimulated ferroptosis in epithelial cells as an inter-cellular mechanism. We further established that suppression of ferroptosis in epithelial cells by NO• is enabled through the suppression of phospholipid peroxidation, particularly the production of pro-ferroptotic 15-HpETE-PE signals. Pharmacological targeting of iNOS (NO• generation) attenuated its anti-ferroptotic function. In conclusion, our findings define a new inter-cellular ferroptosis suppression mechanism which may represent a new strategy of the host against P. aeruginosa induced theft-ferroptosis
    corecore