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Metabolism
2 Results
- Research Article Editors' PickOpen Access
A redox cycle with complex II prioritizes sulfide quinone oxidoreductase-dependent H2S oxidation
Journal of Biological ChemistryVol. 298Issue 1101435Published online: November 18, 2021- Roshan Kumar
- Aaron P. Landry
- Arkajit Guha
- Victor Vitvitsky
- Ho Joon Lee
- Keisuke Seike
- and others
Cited in Scopus: 8The dual roles of H2S as an endogenously synthesized respiratory substrate and as a toxin raise questions as to how it is cleared when the electron transport chain is inhibited. Sulfide quinone oxidoreductase (SQOR) catalyzes the first step in the mitochondrial H2S oxidation pathway, using CoQ as an electron acceptor, and connects to the electron transport chain at the level of complex III. We have discovered that at high H2S concentrations, which are known to inhibit complex IV, a new redox cycle is established between SQOR and complex II, operating in reverse. - 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: 56Unlike 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.