4.6 Article

Hydrogen sulfide perturbs mitochondrial bioenergetics and triggers metabolic reprogramming in colon cells

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 294, Issue 32, Pages 12077-12090

Publisher

AMER SOC BIOCHEMISTRY MOLECULAR BIOLOGY INC
DOI: 10.1074/jbc.RA119.009442

Keywords

cell metabolism; hydrogen sulfide; bioenergetics; colorectal cancer; cell signaling; redox signaling; colonocytes; gut epithelium; metabolic reprogramming; microbiome

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [DK097153, GM130183]
  2. Charles Woodson Research Fund
  3. University of Michigan Pediatric Brain Tumor Initiative
  4. University of Michigan Comprehensive Cancer Center Core Grant [P30 CA046592]
  5. 2017 AACR NextGen Grant for Transformative Cancer Research [17-20-01-LYSS]

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Unlike 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. We found that sulfide quinone oxidoreductase (SQR), which catalyzes the committing step in the mitochondrial sulfide oxidation pathway and couples to complex III, is a critical respiratory shield against H2S poisoning. H2S at concentrations <= 20 mu m stimulated the oxygen consumption rate in colon epithelial cells, but, when SQR expression was ablated, H2S concentrations as low as 5 mu m poisoned cells. Mitochondrial H2S oxidation altered cellular bioenergetics, inducing a reductive shift in the NAD(+)/NADH redox couple. The consequent electron acceptor insufficiency caused uridine and aspartate deficiency and enhanced glutamine-dependent reductive carboxylation. The metabolomic signature of this H2S-induced stress response mapped, in part, to redox-sensitive nodes in central carbon metabolism. Colorectal cancer tissues and cell lines appeared to counter the growth-restricting effects of H2S by overexpressing sulfide oxidation pathway enzymes. Our findings reveal an alternative mechanism for H2S signaling, arising from alterations in mitochondrial bioenergetics that drive metabolic reprogramming

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