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Keyword
- redox signaling2
- bioenergetics1
- cell metabolism1
- cell signaling1
- chemical biology1
- colonocytes1
- colorectal cancer1
- gut epithelium1
- hydrogen sulfide1
- inborn error of metabolism1
- metabolic reprogramming1
- metabolism1
- microbiome1
- mitochondria1
- posttranslational modification (PTM)1
- proteomics1
- TCA cycle1
- tricarboxylic acid cycle (TCA cycle) (Krebs cycle)1
Metabolism
2 Results
- Accelerated CommunicationsOpen Access
Heterogeneous adaptation of cysteine reactivity to a covalent oncometabolite
Journal of Biological ChemistryVol. 295Issue 39p13410–13418Published online: August 19, 2020- Minervo Perez
- Daniel W. Bak
- Sarah E. Bergholtz
- Daniel R. Crooks
- Bhargav Srinivas Arimilli
- Youfeng Yang
- and others
Cited in Scopus: 0An important context in which metabolism influences tumorigenesis is the genetic cancer syndrome hereditary leiomyomatosis and renal cell carcinoma (HLRCC), a disease in which mutation of the tricarboxylic acid cycle enzyme fumarate hydratase (FH) causes hyperaccumulation of fumarate. This electrophilic oncometabolite can alter gene activity at the level of transcription, via reversible inhibition of epigenetic dioxygenases, as well as posttranslationally, via covalent modification of cysteine residues. - MetabolismOpen Access
Hydrogen sulfide perturbs mitochondrial bioenergetics and triggers metabolic reprogramming in colon cells
Journal of Biological ChemistryVol. 294Issue 32p12077–12090Published online: June 18, 2019- Marouane Libiad
- Victor Vitvitsky
- Trever Bostelaar
- Daniel W. Bak
- Ho-Joon Lee
- Naoya Sakamoto
- and others
Cited in Scopus: 59Unlike most other tissues, the colon epithelium is exposed to high levels of H2S derived from gut microbial metabolism. H2S is a signaling molecule that modulates various physiological effects. It is also a respiratory toxin that inhibits complex IV in the electron transfer chain (ETC). Colon epithelial cells are adapted to high environmental H2S exposure as they harbor an efficient mitochondrial H2S oxidation pathway, which is dedicated to its disposal. Herein, we report that the sulfide oxidation pathway enzymes are apically localized in human colonic crypts at the host–microbiome interface, but that the normal apical-to-crypt gradient is lost in colorectal cancer epithelium.