S-Sulfhydration of ATP synthase by hydrogen sulfide stimulates mitochondrial bioenergetics.

Pharmacol Res

Cardiovascular and Metabolic Research Unit, Lakehead University, Thunder Bay, ON, Canada; Department of Biology, Laurentian University, ON, Canada. Electronic address:

Published: November 2016

AI Article Synopsis

  • The researchers found that exposing cell lysates from HepG2 and HEK293 cells to the HS-generating compound NaHS leads to S-sulfhydration of ATP5A1, a key ATP synthase subunit, boosting its activity in a concentration-dependent manner.
  • They further determined that specific cysteine residues on ATP5A1 play important roles in S-sulfhydration, and loss of these residues significantly decreases ATP synthase activity, suggesting that natural HS production is vital for effective

Article Abstract

Mammalian cells can utilize hydrogen sulfide (HS) to support mitochondrial respiration. The aim of our study was to explore the potential role of S-sulfhydration (a HS-induced posttranslational modification, also known as S-persulfidation) of the mitochondrial inner membrane protein ATP synthase (F1F0 ATP synthase/Complex V) in the regulation of mitochondrial bioenergetics. Using a biotin switch assay, we have detected S-sulfhydration of the α subunit (ATP5A1) of ATP synthase in response to exposure to HS in vitro. The HS generator compound NaHS induced S-sulfhydration of ATP5A1 in HepG2 and HEK293 cell lysates in a concentration-dependent manner (50-300μM). The activity of immunocaptured mitochondrial ATP synthase enzyme isolated from HepG2 and HEK293 cells was stimulated by NaHS at low concentrations (10-100nM). Site-directed mutagenesis of ATP5A1 in HEK293 cells demonstrated that cysteine residues at positions 244 and 294 are subject to S-sulfhydration. The double mutant ATP synthase protein (C244S/C294S) showed a significantly reduced enzyme activity compared to control and the single-cysteine-mutated recombinant proteins (C244S or C294S). To determine whether endogenous HS plays a role in the basal S-sulfhydration of ATP synthase in vivo, we compared liver tissues harvested from wild-type mice and mice deficient in cystathionine-gamma-lyase (CSE, one of the three principal mammalian HS-producing enzymes). Significantly reduced S-sulfhydration of ATP5A1 was observed in liver homogenates of CSE mice, compared to wild-type mice, suggesting a physiological role for CSE-derived endogenous HS production in the S-sulfhydration of ATP synthase. Various forms of critical illness (including burn injury) upregulate HS-producing enzymes and stimulate HS biosynthesis. In liver tissues collected from mice subjected to burn injury, we detected an increased S-sulfhydration of ATP5A1 at the early time points post-burn. At later time points (when systemic HS levels decrease) S-sulfhydration of ATP5A1 decreased as well. In conclusion, HS induces S-sulfhydration of ATP5A1 at C244 and C294. This post-translational modification may be a physiological mechanism to maintain ATP synthase in a physiologically activated state, thereby supporting mitochondrial bioenergetics. The sulfhydration of ATP synthase may be a dynamic process, which may be regulated by endogenous HS levels under various pathophysiological conditions.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5107138PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.phrs.2016.08.023DOI Listing

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