4.7 Article

Dysregulated Provision of Oxidisable Substrates to the Mitochondria in ME/CFS Lymphoblasts

期刊

出版社

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms22042046

关键词

Myalgic Encephalomyelitis; ME; CFS; mitochondria; metabolism; transcriptomics; proteomics; beta-oxidation; amino acid catabolism; glycolysis; TCA cycle

资金

  1. Judith Jane Mason & Harold Stannett Williams Memorial Foundation (The Mason Foundation) [MAS2016F063, MAS2018F00026]
  2. McCusker Charitable Foundation

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Patients with Myalgic Encephalomyelitis/Chronic Fatigue Syndrome (ME/CFS) exhibit mitochondrial respiratory inefficiency, elevated respiratory capacity, increased energy stress signaling activity, and dysregulation of metabolic pathways, with a greater reliance on non-glycolytic pathways to provide oxidizable substrates for mitochondria.
Although understanding of the biomedical basis of Myalgic Encephalomyelitis/Chronic Fatigue Syndrome (ME/CFS) is growing, the underlying pathological mechanisms remain uncertain. We recently reported a reduction in the proportion of basal oxygen consumption due to ATP synthesis by Complex V in ME/CFS patient-derived lymphoblast cell lines, suggesting mitochondrial respiratory inefficiency. This was accompanied by elevated respiratory capacity, elevated mammalian target of rapamycin complex 1 (mTORC1) signaling activity and elevated expression of enzymes involved in the TCA cycle, fatty acid beta-oxidation and mitochondrial transport. These and other observations led us to hypothesise the dysregulation of pathways providing the mitochondria with oxidisable substrates. In our current study, we aimed to revisit this hypothesis by applying a combination of whole-cell transcriptomics, proteomics and energy stress signaling activity measures using subsets of up to 34 ME/CFS and 31 healthy control lymphoblast cell lines from our growing library. While levels of glycolytic enzymes were unchanged in accordance with our previous observations of unaltered glycolytic rates, the whole-cell proteomes of ME/CFS lymphoblasts contained elevated levels of enzymes involved in the TCA cycle (p = 1.03 x 10(-4)), the pentose phosphate pathway (p = 0.034, G6PD p = 5.5 x 10(-4)), mitochondrial fatty acid beta-oxidation (p = 9.2 x 10(-3)), and degradation of amino acids including glutamine/glutamate (GLS p = 0.034, GLUD1 p = 0.048, GOT2 p = 0.026), branched-chain amino acids (BCKDHA p = 0.028, BCKDHB p = 0.031) and essential amino acids (FAH p = 0.036, GCDH p = 0.006). The activity of the major cellular energy stress sensor, AMPK, was elevated but the increase did not reach statistical significance. The results suggest that ME/CFS metabolism is dysregulated such that alternatives to glycolysis are more heavily utilised than in controls to provide the mitochondria with oxidisable substrates.

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