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Mitochondrial thiol modification by a targeted electrophile inhibits metabolism in breast adenocarcinoma cells by inhibiting enzyme activity and protein levels

Many cancer cells follow an aberrant metabolic program to maintain energy for rapid cell proliferation. Metabolic reprogramming often involves the upregulation of glutaminolysis to generate reducing equivalents for the electron transport chain and amino acids for protein synthesis. Critical enzymes...

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Autores principales: Smith, M. Ryan, Vayalil, Praveen K., Zhou, Fen, Benavides, Gloria A., Beggs, Reena R., Golzarian, Hafez, Nijampatnam, Bhavitavya, Oliver, Patsy G., Smith, Robin A.J., Murphy, Michael P., Velu, Sadanandan E., Landar, Aimee
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Elsevier 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4732023/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26774751
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.redox.2016.01.002
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author Smith, M. Ryan
Vayalil, Praveen K.
Zhou, Fen
Benavides, Gloria A.
Beggs, Reena R.
Golzarian, Hafez
Nijampatnam, Bhavitavya
Oliver, Patsy G.
Smith, Robin A.J.
Murphy, Michael P.
Velu, Sadanandan E.
Landar, Aimee
author_facet Smith, M. Ryan
Vayalil, Praveen K.
Zhou, Fen
Benavides, Gloria A.
Beggs, Reena R.
Golzarian, Hafez
Nijampatnam, Bhavitavya
Oliver, Patsy G.
Smith, Robin A.J.
Murphy, Michael P.
Velu, Sadanandan E.
Landar, Aimee
author_sort Smith, M. Ryan
collection PubMed
description Many cancer cells follow an aberrant metabolic program to maintain energy for rapid cell proliferation. Metabolic reprogramming often involves the upregulation of glutaminolysis to generate reducing equivalents for the electron transport chain and amino acids for protein synthesis. Critical enzymes involved in metabolism possess a reactive thiolate group, which can be modified by certain oxidants. In the current study, we show that modification of mitochondrial protein thiols by a model compound, iodobutyl triphenylphosphonium (IBTP), decreased mitochondrial metabolism and ATP in MDA-MB 231 (MB231) breast adenocarcinoma cells up to 6 days after an initial 24 h treatment. Mitochondrial thiol modification also depressed oxygen consumption rates (OCR) in a dose-dependent manner to a greater extent than a non-thiol modifying analog, suggesting that thiol reactivity is an important factor in the inhibition of cancer cell metabolism. In non-tumorigenic MCF-10A cells, IBTP also decreased OCR; however the extracellular acidification rate was significantly increased at all but the highest concentration (10 µM) of IBTP indicating that thiol modification can have significantly different effects on bioenergetics in tumorigenic versus non-tumorigenic cells. ATP and other adenonucleotide levels were also decreased by thiol modification up to 6 days post-treatment, indicating a decreased overall energetic state in MB231 cells. Cellular proliferation of MB231 cells was also inhibited up to 6 days post-treatment with little change to cell viability. Targeted metabolomic analyses revealed that thiol modification caused depletion of both Krebs cycle and glutaminolysis intermediates. Further experiments revealed that the activity of the Krebs cycle enzyme, aconitase, was attenuated in response to thiol modification. Additionally, the inhibition of glutaminolysis corresponded to decreased glutaminase C (GAC) protein levels, although other protein levels were unaffected. This study demonstrates for the first time that mitochondrial thiol modification inhibits metabolism via inhibition of both aconitase and GAC in a breast cancer cell model.
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spelling pubmed-47320232016-02-23 Mitochondrial thiol modification by a targeted electrophile inhibits metabolism in breast adenocarcinoma cells by inhibiting enzyme activity and protein levels Smith, M. Ryan Vayalil, Praveen K. Zhou, Fen Benavides, Gloria A. Beggs, Reena R. Golzarian, Hafez Nijampatnam, Bhavitavya Oliver, Patsy G. Smith, Robin A.J. Murphy, Michael P. Velu, Sadanandan E. Landar, Aimee Redox Biol Research Paper Many cancer cells follow an aberrant metabolic program to maintain energy for rapid cell proliferation. Metabolic reprogramming often involves the upregulation of glutaminolysis to generate reducing equivalents for the electron transport chain and amino acids for protein synthesis. Critical enzymes involved in metabolism possess a reactive thiolate group, which can be modified by certain oxidants. In the current study, we show that modification of mitochondrial protein thiols by a model compound, iodobutyl triphenylphosphonium (IBTP), decreased mitochondrial metabolism and ATP in MDA-MB 231 (MB231) breast adenocarcinoma cells up to 6 days after an initial 24 h treatment. Mitochondrial thiol modification also depressed oxygen consumption rates (OCR) in a dose-dependent manner to a greater extent than a non-thiol modifying analog, suggesting that thiol reactivity is an important factor in the inhibition of cancer cell metabolism. In non-tumorigenic MCF-10A cells, IBTP also decreased OCR; however the extracellular acidification rate was significantly increased at all but the highest concentration (10 µM) of IBTP indicating that thiol modification can have significantly different effects on bioenergetics in tumorigenic versus non-tumorigenic cells. ATP and other adenonucleotide levels were also decreased by thiol modification up to 6 days post-treatment, indicating a decreased overall energetic state in MB231 cells. Cellular proliferation of MB231 cells was also inhibited up to 6 days post-treatment with little change to cell viability. Targeted metabolomic analyses revealed that thiol modification caused depletion of both Krebs cycle and glutaminolysis intermediates. Further experiments revealed that the activity of the Krebs cycle enzyme, aconitase, was attenuated in response to thiol modification. Additionally, the inhibition of glutaminolysis corresponded to decreased glutaminase C (GAC) protein levels, although other protein levels were unaffected. This study demonstrates for the first time that mitochondrial thiol modification inhibits metabolism via inhibition of both aconitase and GAC in a breast cancer cell model. Elsevier 2016-01-08 /pmc/articles/PMC4732023/ /pubmed/26774751 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.redox.2016.01.002 Text en © 2016 The Authors http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Research Paper
Smith, M. Ryan
Vayalil, Praveen K.
Zhou, Fen
Benavides, Gloria A.
Beggs, Reena R.
Golzarian, Hafez
Nijampatnam, Bhavitavya
Oliver, Patsy G.
Smith, Robin A.J.
Murphy, Michael P.
Velu, Sadanandan E.
Landar, Aimee
Mitochondrial thiol modification by a targeted electrophile inhibits metabolism in breast adenocarcinoma cells by inhibiting enzyme activity and protein levels
title Mitochondrial thiol modification by a targeted electrophile inhibits metabolism in breast adenocarcinoma cells by inhibiting enzyme activity and protein levels
title_full Mitochondrial thiol modification by a targeted electrophile inhibits metabolism in breast adenocarcinoma cells by inhibiting enzyme activity and protein levels
title_fullStr Mitochondrial thiol modification by a targeted electrophile inhibits metabolism in breast adenocarcinoma cells by inhibiting enzyme activity and protein levels
title_full_unstemmed Mitochondrial thiol modification by a targeted electrophile inhibits metabolism in breast adenocarcinoma cells by inhibiting enzyme activity and protein levels
title_short Mitochondrial thiol modification by a targeted electrophile inhibits metabolism in breast adenocarcinoma cells by inhibiting enzyme activity and protein levels
title_sort mitochondrial thiol modification by a targeted electrophile inhibits metabolism in breast adenocarcinoma cells by inhibiting enzyme activity and protein levels
topic Research Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4732023/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26774751
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.redox.2016.01.002
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