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1.
bioRxiv ; 2024 Jul 31.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39131293

RESUMO

Forty percent of the US population and 1 in 6 individuals worldwide are obese, and the incidence of this disease is surging globally1,2. Various dietary interventions, including carbohydrate and fat restriction, and more recently amino acid restriction, have been explored to combat this epidemic3-6. We sought to investigate the impact of removing individual amino acids on the weight profiles of mice. Compared to essential amino acid restriction, induction of conditional cysteine restriction resulted in the most dramatic weight loss, amounting to 20% within 3 days and 30% within one week, which was readily reversed. This weight loss occurred despite the presence of substantial cysteine reserves stored in glutathione (GSH) across various tissues7. Further analysis demonstrated that the weight reduction primarily stemmed from an increase in the utilization of fat mass, while locomotion, circadian rhythm and histological appearance of multiple other tissues remained largely unaffected. Cysteine deficiency activated the integrated stress response (ISR) and NRF2-mediated oxidative stress response (OSR), which amplify each other, leading to the induction of GDF15 and FGF21, hormones associated with increased lipolysis, energy homeostasis and food aversion8-10. We additionally observed rapid tissue coenzyme A (CoA) depletion, resulting in energetically inefficient anaerobic glycolysis and TCA cycle, with sustained urinary excretion of pyruvate, orotate, citrate, α-ketoglutarate, nitrogen rich compounds and amino acids. In summary, our investigation highlights that cysteine restriction, by depleting GSH and CoA, exerts a maximal impact on weight loss, metabolism, and stress signaling compared to other amino acid restrictions. These findings may pave the way for innovative strategies for addressing a range of metabolic diseases and the growing obesity crisis.

2.
bioRxiv ; 2024 Jun 02.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38853873

RESUMO

Mitochondrial function is important for both energetic and anabolic metabolism. Pathogenic mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) mutations directly impact these functions, resulting in the detrimental consequences seen in human mitochondrial diseases. The role of pathogenic mtDNA mutations in human cancers is less clear; while pathogenic mtDNA mutations are observed in some cancer types, they are almost absent in others. We report here that the proofreading mutant DNA polymerase gamma ( PolG D256A ) induced a high mtDNA mutation burden in non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC), and promoted the accumulation of defective mitochondria, which is responsible for decreased tumor cell proliferation and viability and increased cancer survival. In NSCLC cells, pathogenic mtDNA mutations increased glycolysis and caused dependence on glucose. The glucose dependency sustained mitochondrial energetics but at the cost of a decreased NAD+/NADH ratio that inhibited de novo serine synthesis. Insufficient serine synthesis, in turn, impaired the downstream synthesis of GSH and nucleotides, leading to impaired tumor growth that increased cancer survival. Unlike tumors with intact mitochondrial function, NSCLC with pathogenic mtDNA mutations were sensitive to dietary serine and glycine deprivation. Thus, mitochondrial function in NSCLC is required specifically to sustain sufficient serine synthesis for nucleotide production and redox homeostasis to support tumor growth, explaining why these cancers preserve functional mtDNA. In brief: High mtDNA mutation burden in non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC) leads to the accumulation of respiration-defective mitochondria and dependency on glucose and glycolytic metabolism. Defective respiratory metabolism causes a massive accumulation of cytosolic nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide + hydrogen (NADH), which impedes serine synthesis and, thereby, glutathione (GSH) and nucleotide synthesis, leading to impaired tumor growth and increased survival. Highlights: Proofreading mutations in Polymerase gamma led to a high burden of mitochondrial DNA mutations, promoting the accumulation of mitochondria with respiratory defects in NSCLC.Defective respiration led to reduced proliferation and viability of NSCLC cells increasing survival to cancer.Defective respiration caused glucose dependency to fuel elevated glycolysis.Altered glucose metabolism is associated with high NADH that limits serine synthesis, leading to impaired GSH and nucleotide production.Mitochondrial respiration defects sensitize NSCLC to dietary serine/glycine starvation, further increasing survival.

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