Newborn mammalian cardiomyocytes quickly transition from a fetal to an adult phenotype that utilizes mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation but loses mitotic capacity. We tested whether forced reversal of adult cardiomyocytes back to a fetal glycolytic phenotype would restore proliferative capacity. We deleted Uqcrfs1 (mitochondrial Rieske Iron-Sulfur protein, RISP) in hearts of adult mice. As RISP protein decreased, heart mitochondrial function declined, and glucose utilization increased. Simultaneously, they underwent hyperplastic remodeling during which cardiomyocyte number doubled without cellular hypertrophy. Cellular energy supply was preserved, AMPK activation was absent, and mTOR activation was evident. In ischemic hearts with RISP deletion, new cardiomyocytes migrated into the infarcted region, suggesting the potential for therapeutic cardiac regeneration. RNA-seq revealed upregulation of genes associated with cardiac development and proliferation. Metabolomic analysis revealed a decrease in alpha-ketoglutarate (required for TET-mediated demethylation) and an increase in S-adenosylmethionine (required for methyltransferase activity). Analysis revealed an increase in methylated CpGs near gene transcriptional start sites. Genes that were both differentially expressed and differentially methylated were linked to upregulated cardiac developmental pathways. We conclude that decreased mitochondrial function and increased glucose utilization can restore mitotic capacity in adult cardiomyocytes resulting in the generation of new heart cells, potentially through the modification of substrates that regulate epigenetic modification of genes required for proliferation.
Gregory B. Waypa, Kimberly A. Smith, Paul T. Mungai, Vincent J. Dudley, Kathryn A. Helmin, Benjamin D. Singer, Clara Bien Peek, Joseph Bass, Lauren Beussink-Nelson, Sanjiv J. Shah, Gaston Ofman, J. Andrew Wasserstrom, William A. Muller, Alexander V. Misharin, G.R. Scott Budinger, Hiam Abdala-Valencia, Navdeep S. Chandel, Danijela Dokic, Elizabeth T. Bartom, Shuang Zhang, Yuki Tatekoshi, Amir Mahmoodzadeh, Hossein Ardehali, Edward B. Thorp, Paul T. Schumacker
Spinal Muscular Atrophy (SMA) is typically characterized as a motor neuron disease, but extra-neuronal phenotypes are present in almost every organ in severely affected patients and animal models. Extra-neuronal phenotypes were previously underappreciated as patients with severe SMA phenotypes usually died in infancy; however, with current treatments for motor neurons increasing patient lifespan, impaired function of peripheral organs may develop into significant future comorbidities and lead to new treatment-modified phenotypes. Fatty liver is seen in SMA animal models , but generalizability to patients and whether this is due to hepatocyte-intrinsic Survival Motor Neuron (SMN) protein deficiency and/or subsequent to skeletal muscle denervation is unknown. If liver pathology in SMA is SMN-dependent and hepatocyte-intrinsic, this suggests SMN repleting therapies must target extra-neuronal tissues and motor neurons for optimal patient outcome. Here we showed that fatty liver is present in SMA and that SMA patient-specific iHeps were susceptible to steatosis. Using proteomics, functional studies and CRISPR/Cas9 gene editing, we confirmed that fatty liver in SMA is a primary SMN-dependent hepatocyte-intrinsic liver defect associated with mitochondrial and other hepatic metabolism implications. These pathologies require monitoring and indicate need for systematic clinical surveillance and additional and/or combinatorial therapies to ensure continued SMA patient health.
Damien Meng-Kiat Leow, Yang Kai Ng, Loo Chien Wang, Hiromi W.L. Koh, Tianyun Zhao, Zi Jian Khong, Tommaso Tabaglio, Gunaseelan Narayanan, Richard M. Giadone, Radoslaw M. Sobota, Shi-Yan Ng, Adrian K.K. Teo, Simon H Parson, Lee L. Rubin, Wei-Yi Ong, Basil T. Darras, Crystal J.J. Yeo
Pancreatic β-cell dysfunction is a key feature of type 2 diabetes, and novel regulators of insulin secretion are desirable. Here we report that the succinate receptor (SUCNR1) is expressed in β-cells and is up-regulated in hyperglycemic states in mice and humans. We found that succinate acts as a hormone-like metabolite and stimulates insulin secretion via a SUCNR1-Gq-PKC-dependent mechanism in human β-cells. Mice with β-cell-specific Sucnr1 deficiency exhibit impaired glucose tolerance and insulin secretion on a high-fat diet, indicating that SUCNR1 is essential for preserving insulin secretion in diet-induced insulin resistance. Patients with impaired glucose tolerance show an enhanced nutritional-related succinate response, which correlates with the potentiation of insulin secretion during intravenous glucose administration. These data demonstrate that the succinate/SUCNR1 axis is activated by high glucose and identify a GPCR-mediated amplifying pathway for insulin secretion relevant to the hyperinsulinemia of prediabetic states.
Joan Sabadell-Basallote, Brenno Astiarraga, Carlos Castaño, Miriam Ejarque, Maria Repollés-de-Dalmau, Ivan Quesada, Jordi Blanco, Catalina Nuñez-Roa, M-Mar Rodríguez-Peña, Laia Martínez, Dario F. De Jesus, Laura Marroqui, Ramon Bosch, Eduard Montanya, Francesc X. Sureda, Andrea Tura, Andrea Mari, Rohit N. Kulkarni, Joan Vendrell, Sonia Fernández-Veledo
Dicarboxylic fatty acids are generated in the liver and kidney in a minor pathway called fatty acid ω-oxidation. The effects of consuming dicarboxylic fatty acids as an alternative source of dietary fat have not been explored. Here, we fed dodecanedioic acid, a 12-carbon dicarboxylic (DC12), to mice at 20% of daily caloric intake for nine weeks. DC12 increased metabolic rate, reduced body fat, reduced liver fat, and improved glucose tolerance. We observed DC12-specific breakdown products in liver, kidney, muscle, heart, and brain, indicating that oral DC12 escaped first-pass liver metabolism and was utilized by many tissues. In tissues expressing the “a” isoform of acyl-CoA oxidase-1 (ACOX1), a key peroxisomal fatty acid oxidation enzyme, DC12 was chain shortened to the TCA cycle intermediate succinyl-CoA. In tissues with low peroxisomal fatty acid oxidation capacity, DC12 was oxidized by mitochondria. In vitro, DC12 was catabolized even by adipose tissue and was not stored intracellularly. We conclude that DC12 and other dicarboxylic acids may be useful for combatting obesity and for treating metabolic disorders.
Eric S. Goetzman, Bob B. Zhang, Yuxun Zhang, Sivakama S. Bharathi, Joanna Bons, Jacob Rose, Samah Shah, Keaton J. Solo, Alexandra V. Schmidt, Adam C. Richert, Steven J. Mullett, Stacy L. Gelhaus, Krithika S. Rao, Sruti S. Shiva, Katherine E. Pfister, Anne Silva Barbosa, Sunder Sims-Lucas, Steven F. Dobrowolski, Birgit Schilling
Carbohydrates and lipids provide the majority of substrates to fuel mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS). Metabolic inflexibility, defined as an impaired ability to switch between these fuels, is implicated in a number of metabolic diseases. Here we explore the mechanism by which physical inactivity promotes metabolic inflexibility in skeletal muscle. We developed a mouse model of sedentariness, small mouse cage (SMC) that, unlike other classic models of disuse in mice, faithfully recapitulated metabolic responses that occur in humans. Bioenergetic phenotyping of skeletal muscle mitochondria displayed metabolic inflexibility induced by physical inactivity, demonstrated by a reduction in pyruvate-stimulated respiration (JO2) in absence of a change in palmitate-stimulated JO2. Pyruvate resistance in these mitochondria was likely driven by a decrease in phosphatidylethanolamine (PE) abundance in the mitochondrial membrane. Reduction in mitochondrial PE by heterozygous deletion of phosphatidylserine decarboxylase (PSD) was sufficient to induce metabolic inflexibility measured at the whole-body level, as well as at the level of skeletal muscle mitochondria. Low mitochondrial PE in C2C12 myotubes was sufficient to increase glucose flux towards lactate. We further implicate that resistance to pyruvate metabolism is due to attenuated mitochondrial entry via mitochondrial pyruvate carrier (MPC). These findings suggest a mechanism by which mitochondrial PE directly regulates MPC activity to modulate metabolic flexibility in mice.
Piyarat Siripoksup, Guoshen Cao, Ahmad A. Cluntun, J. Alan Maschek, Quentinn Pearce, Marisa J. Lang, Mi-Young Jeong, Hiroaki Eshima, Patrick J. Ferrara, Precious C. Opurum, Ziad S. Mahmassani, Alek D. Peterlin, Shinya Watanabe, Maureen A. Walsh, Eric B. Taylor, James E. Cox, Micah J. Drummond, Jared Rutter, Katsuhiko Funai
Clear cell renal cell carcinoma (ccRCC) is characterized by dysregulated hypoxia signaling and a tumor microenvironment (TME) highly enriched in myeloid and lymphoid cells. Loss of the von Hippel Lindau (VHL) gene is a critical early event in ccRCC pathogenesis and promotes stabilization of HIF. Whether VHL loss in cancer cells affects immune cells in the TME remains unclear. Using Vhl WT and Vhl-KO in vivo murine kidney cancer Renca models, we found that Vhl-KO tumors were more infiltrated by immune cells. Tumor-associated macrophages (TAMs) from Vhl-deficient tumors demonstrated enhanced in vivo glucose consumption, phagocytosis, and inflammatory transcriptional signatures, whereas lymphocytes from Vhl-KO tumors showed reduced activation and a lower response to anti–programmed cell death 1 (anti–PD-1) therapy in vivo. The chemokine CX3CL1 was highly expressed in human ccRCC tumors and was associated with Vhl deficiency. Deletion of Cx3cl1 in cancer cells decreased myeloid cell infiltration associated with Vhl loss to provide a mechanism by which Vhl loss may have contributed to the altered immune landscape. Here, we identify cancer cell–specific genetic features that drove environmental reprogramming and shaped the tumor immune landscape, with therapeutic implications for the treatment of ccRCC.
Melissa M. Wolf, Matthew Z. Madden, Emily N. Arner, Jackie E. Bader, Xiang Ye, Logan Vlach, Megan L. Tigue, Madelyn D. Landis, Patrick B. Jonker, Zaid Hatem, KayLee K. Steiner, Dakim K. Gaines, Bradley I. Reinfeld, Emma S. Hathaway, Fuxue Xin, M. Noor Tantawy, Scott M. Haake, Eric Jonasch, Alexander Muir, Vivian L. Weiss, Kathryn E. Beckermann, W. Kimryn Rathmell, Jeffrey C. Rathmell
Lactylation has been recently identified as a new type of posttranslational modification widely occurring on lysine residues of both histone and non-histone proteins. The acetyl transferase p300 is thought to mediate protein lactylation, yet the cellular concentration of the proposed lactyl-donor, lactyl-coenzyme A is about 1,000 times lower than that of acetyl-CoA, raising the question whether p300 is a genuine lactyl-transferase. Here, we report the Alanyl-tRNA synthetase 1 (AARS1) moonlights as a bona fide lactyl-transferase that directly uses lactate and ATP to catalyze protein lactylation. Among the candidate substrates, we focused on the Hippo pathway that has a well-established role in tumorigenesis. Specifically, AARS1 was found to sense intracellular lactate and translocate into the nucleus to lactylate and activate YAP-TEAD complex; and AARS1 itself was identified as a Hippo target gene that forms a positive feedback loop with YAP-TEAD to promote gastric cancer (GC) cell proliferation. Consistently, the expression of AARS1 was found to be upregulated in GC, and elevated AARS1 expression was found to be associated with poor prognosis for GC patients. Collectively, this work discovered AARS1 with lactyl-transferase activity in vitro and in vivo and revealed how the metabolite lactate is translated into a signal of cell proliferation.
Junyi Ju, Hui Zhang, Moubin Lin, Zifeng Yan, Liwei An, Zhifa Cao, Dandan Geng, Jingwu Yue, Yang Tang, Luyang Tian, Fan Chen, Yi Han, Wenjia Wang, Shimin Zhao, Jiao Shi, Zhaocai Zhou
Gianfranco Di Giuseppe, Laura Soldovieri, Gea Ciccarelli, Pietro Manuel Ferraro, Giuseppe Quero, Francesca Cinti, Umberto Capece, Simona Moffa, Enrico Celestino Nista, Antonio Gasbarrini, Andrea Mari, Sergio Alfieri, Vincenzo Tondolo, Alfredo Pontecorvi, Jens Juul Holst, Andrea Giaccari, Teresa Mezza
Antitumor responses of CD8+ T cells are tightly regulated by distinct metabolic fitness. High levels of glutathione (GSH) are observed in the majority of tumors contributing to cancer progression and treatment resistance in part by preventing glutathione peroxidase 4 (GPX4) dependent ferroptosis. Here, we show the necessity of the adenosine A2A receptor (A2AR) signaling and the glutathione (GSH)-GPX4 axis in orchestrating metabolic fitness and survival of functionally competent CD8+ T cells. Activated CD8+ T cells treated ex vivo with simultaneous inhibition of A2AR and lipid peroxidation acquire a superior capacity to proliferate and persist in vivo, demonstrating a translatable means to prevent ferroptosis in adoptive cell therapy (ACT). Additionally, we identify a particular cluster of intratumoral CD8+ T cells expressing a putative gene signature of GSH metabolism (GMGS) in association with clinical response and survival across several human cancers. Our study addresses a key role of GSH-GPX4 and adenosinergic pathways in fine-tuning the metabolic fitness of antitumor CD8+ T cells.
Siqi Chen, Jie Fan, Ping Xie, Jihae Ahn, Michelle Fernandez, Leah K. Billingham, Jason Miska, Jennifer D. Wu, Derek A. Wainwright, Deyu Fang, Jeffrey A. Sosman, Yong Wan, Yi Zhang, Navdeep S. Chandel, Bin Zhang
In response to a meal, insulin drives hepatic glycogen synthesis to help regulate systemic glucose homeostasis. The mechanistic target of rapamycin complex 1 (mTORC1) is a well-established insulin target and contributes to the postprandial control of liver lipid metabolism, autophagy, and protein synthesis. However, its role in hepatic glucose metabolism is less understood. Here, we used metabolomics, isotope tracing, and mouse genetics to define a role for liver mTORC1 signaling in the control of postprandial glycolytic intermediates and glycogen deposition. We show that mTORC1 is required for glycogen synthase activity and glycogenesis. Mechanistically, hepatic mTORC1 activity promotes the feeding-dependent induction of Ppp1r3b, a gene encoding a phosphatase important for glycogen synthase activity whose polymorphisms are linked to human diabetes. Re-expression of Ppp1r3b in livers lacking mTORC1 signaling enhances glycogen synthase activity and restores postprandial glycogen content. mTORC1-dependent transcriptional control of Ppp1r3b is facilitated by FOXO1, a well characterized transcriptional regulator involved in the hepatic response to nutrient intake. Collectively, we identify a role for mTORC1 signaling in the transcriptional regulation of Ppp1r3b and the subsequent induction of postprandial hepatic glycogen synthesis.
Kahealani Uehara, Won Dong Lee, Megan Stefkovich, Dipsikha Biswas, Dominic Santoleri, Anna E. Garcia Whitlock, William J. Quinn III, Talia N. Coopersmith, Kate Townsend Creasy, Daniel J. Rader, Kei Sakamoto, Joshua D. Rabinowitz, Paul M. Titchenell