AI Article Synopsis

  • - The pyruvate dehydrogenase complex (PDHC) connects glycolysis to the mitochondrial tricarboxylic acid cycle, responding to cellular needs primarily through PDH phosphorylation, and produces acetyl-CoA crucial for regulating metabolism linked to circadian rhythms.
  • - Thiamine (vitamin B1) plays a pivotal role as both an activator of PDHC and an inhibitor of PDH inactivating kinases, influencing brain metabolism by affecting PDHC function, expression, and phosphorylation based on time of day.
  • - Morning thiamine administration reduces PDH phosphorylation and SIRT3 protein levels in rat brains, altering protein acetylation patterns and disrupting normal daily variations in metabolic processes, highlighting thiamine

Article Abstract

Coupling glycolysis and mitochondrial tricarboxylic acid cycle, pyruvate dehydrogenase (PDH) complex (PDHC) is highly responsive to cellular demands through multiple mechanisms, including PDH phosphorylation. PDHC also produces acetyl-CoA for protein acetylation involved in circadian regulation of metabolism. Thiamine (vitamin B1) diphosphate (ThDP) is known to activate PDH as both coenzyme and inhibitor of the PDH inactivating kinases. Molecular mechanisms integrating the function of thiamine-dependent PDHC into general redox metabolism, underlie physiological fitness of a cell or an organism. Here, we characterize the daytime- and thiamine-dependent changes in the rat brain PDHC function, expression and phosphorylation, assessing their impact on protein acetylation and metabolic regulation. Morning administration of thiamine significantly downregulates both the PDH phosphorylation at Ser293 and SIRT3 protein level, the effects not observed upon the evening administration. This action of thiamine nullifies the daytime-dependent changes in the brain PDHC activity and mitochondrial acetylation, inducing diurnal difference in the cytosolic acetylation and acetylation of total brain proteins. Screening the daytime dependence of central metabolic enzymes and proteins of thiol/disulfide metabolism reveals that thiamine also cancels daily changes in the malate dehydrogenase activity, opposite to those of the PDHC activity. Correlation analysis indicates that thiamine abrogates the strong positive correlation between the total acetylation of the brain proteins and PDHC function. Simultaneously, thiamine heightens interplay between the expression of PDHC components and total acetylation or SIRT2 protein level. These thiamine effects on the brain acetylation system change metabolic impact of acetylation. The changes are exemplified by the thiamine enhancement of the SIRT2 correlations with metabolic enzymes and proteins of thiol-disulfide metabolism. Thus, we show the daytime- and thiamine-dependent changes in the function and phosphorylation of brain PDHC, contributing to regulation of the brain acetylation system and redox metabolism. The daytime-dependent action of thiamine on PDHC and SIRT3 may be of therapeutic significance in correcting perturbed diurnal regulation.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8348093PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijms22158006DOI Listing

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