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result(s) for
"Aconitate hydratase"
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Nitric oxide orchestrates metabolic rewiring in M1 macrophages by targeting aconitase 2 and pyruvate dehydrogenase
by
Ghesquière, Bart
,
Cassel, Teresa
,
Higashi, Richard M.
in
38/39
,
631/250/2504/342/1726
,
631/250/256/2516
2020
Profound metabolic changes are characteristic of macrophages during classical activation and have been implicated in this phenotype. Here we demonstrate that nitric oxide (NO) produced by murine macrophages is responsible for TCA cycle alterations and citrate accumulation associated with polarization.
13
C tracing and mitochondrial respiration experiments map NO-mediated suppression of metabolism to mitochondrial aconitase (ACO2). Moreover, we find that inflammatory macrophages reroute pyruvate away from pyruvate dehydrogenase (PDH) in an NO-dependent and hypoxia-inducible factor 1α (Hif1α)-independent manner, thereby promoting glutamine-based anaplerosis. Ultimately, NO accumulation leads to suppression and loss of mitochondrial electron transport chain (ETC) complexes. Our data reveal that macrophages metabolic rewiring, in vitro and in vivo, is dependent on NO targeting specific pathways, resulting in reduced production of inflammatory mediators. Our findings require modification to current models of macrophage biology and demonstrate that reprogramming of metabolism should be considered a result rather than a mediator of inflammatory polarization.
Production of inflammatory mediators by M1-polarized macrophages is thought to rely on suppression of mitochondrial metabolism in favor of glycolysis. Refining this concept, here the authors define metabolic targets of nitric oxide as responsible for the mitochondrial rewiring resulting from polarization.
Journal Article
Mechanism underlying the antioxidant activity of taurine: prevention of mitochondrial oxidant production
by
Schaffer, Stephen
,
Jong, Chian Ju
,
Azuma, Junichi
in
Aconitate Hydratase - antagonists & inhibitors
,
Aconitate Hydratase - metabolism
,
Alanine
2012
An important function of the β-amino acid, taurine, is the regulation of oxidative stress. However, taurine is neither a classical scavenger nor a regulator of the antioxidative defenses, leaving uncertain the mechanism underlying the antioxidant activity of taurine. In the present study, the taurine antagonist and taurine transport inhibitor, β-alanine, was used to examine the mechanism underlying the antioxidant activity of taurine. Exposure of isolated cardiomyocytes to medium containing β-alanine for a period of 48 h led to a 45% decrease in taurine content and an increase in mitochondrial oxidative stress, as evidenced by enhanced superoxide generation, the inactivation of the oxidant sensitive enzyme, aconitase, and the oxidation of glutathione. Associated with the increase in oxidative stress was a decline in electron transport activity, with the activities of respiratory chain complexes I and III declining 50–65% and oxygen consumption falling 30%. A reduction in respiratory chain activity coupled with an increase in oxidative stress is commonly caused by the development of a bottleneck in electron transport that leads to the diversion of electrons from the respiratory chain to the acceptor oxygen forming in the process superoxide. Because β-alanine exposure significantly reduces the levels of respiratory chain complex subunits, ND5 and ND6, the bottleneck in electron transport appears to be caused by impaired synthesis of key subunits of the electron transport chain complexes. Co-administration of taurine with β-alanine largely prevents the mitochondrial effects of β-alanine, but treatment of the cells with 5 mM taurine in the absence of β-alanine has no effect on the mitochondria, likely because taurine treatment has little effect on cellular taurine levels. Thus, taurine serves as a regulator of mitochondrial protein synthesis, thereby enhancing electron transport chain activity and protecting the mitochondria against excessive superoxide generation.
Journal Article
What controls fleshy fruit acidity? A review of malate and citrate accumulation in fruit cells
by
Mbeguié-A-Mbéguié, D.
,
Etienne, A.
,
Bugaud, C.
in
Acidity
,
Aconitate Hydratase
,
Aconitate Hydratase - metabolism
2013
Fleshy fruit acidity is an important component of fruit organoleptic quality and is mainly due to the presence of malic and citric acids, the main organic acids found in most ripe fruits. The accumulation of these two acids in fruit cells is the result of several interlinked processes that take place in different compartments of the cell and appear to be under the control of many factors. This review combines analyses of transcriptomic, metabolomic, and proteomic data, and fruit process-based simulation models of the accumulation of citric and malic acids, to further our understanding of the physiological mechanisms likely to control the accumulation of these two acids during fruit development. The effects of agro-environmental factors, such as the source:sink ratio, water supply, mineral nutrition, and temperature, on citric and malic acid accumulation in fruit cells have been reported in several agronomic studies. This review sheds light on the interactions between these factors and the metabolism and storage of organic acids in the cell.
Journal Article
Inhibition of aconitase by nitric oxide leads to induction of the alternative oxidase and to a shift of metabolism towards biosynthesis of amino acids
by
Shah, Jay K.
,
Kaiser, Werner M.
,
Bauwe, Hermann
in
aconitate hydratase
,
Aconitate Hydratase - antagonists & inhibitors
,
Aconitate Hydratase - metabolism
2012
Nitric oxide (NO) is a free radical molecule involved in signalling and in hypoxic metabolism. This work used the nitrate reductase double mutant ofArabidopsis thaliana(nia) and studied metabolic profiles, aconitase activity, and alternative oxidase (AOX) capacity and expression under normoxia and hypoxia (1% oxygen) in wild-type andniaplants. The roots ofniaplants accumulated very little NO as compared to wild-type plants which exhibited ∼20-fold increase in NO emission under low oxygen conditions. These data suggest that nitrate reductase is involved in NO production either directly or by supplying nitrite to other sites of NO production (e.g. mitochondria). Various studies revealed that NO can induce AOX in mitochondria, but the mechanism has not been established yet. This study demonstrates that the NO produced in roots of wild-type plants inhibits aconitase which in turn leads to a marked increase in citrate levels. The accumulating citrate enhances AOX capacity, expression, and protein abundance. In contrast to wild-type plants, theniadouble mutant failed to show AOX induction. The overall induction of AOX in wild-type roots correlated with accumulation of glycine, serine, leucine, lysine, and other amino acids. The findings show that NO inhibits aconitase under hypoxia which results in accumulation of citrate, the latter in turn inducing AOX and causing a shift of metabolism towards amino acid biosynthesis.
Journal Article
Modified mevalonate pathway of the archaeon Aeropyrum pernix proceeds via trans-anhydromevalonate 5-phosphate
by
Ito, Tomokazu
,
Kawaide, Hiroshi
,
Sobue, Fumiaki
in
Aconitate Hydratase - genetics
,
Aconitate Hydratase - metabolism
,
Aeropyrum - genetics
2018
The modified mevalonate pathway is believed to be the upstream biosynthetic route for isoprenoids in general archaea. The partially identified pathway has been proposed to explain a mystery surrounding the lack of phosphomevalonate kinase and diphosphomevalonate decarboxylase by the discovery of a conserved enzyme, isopentenyl phosphate kinase. Phosphomevalonate decarboxylase was considered to be the missing link that would fill the vacancy in the pathway between mevalonate 5-phosphate and isopentenyl phosphate. This enzyme was recently discovered from haloarchaea and certain Chroloflexi bacteria, but their enzymes are close homologs of diphosphomevalonate decarboxylase, which are absent in most archaea. In this study, we used comparative genomic analysis to find two enzymes from a hyperthermophilic archaeon, Aeropyrum pernix, that can replace phosphomevalonate decarboxylase. One enzyme, which has been annotated as putative aconitase, catalyzes the dehydration of mevalonate 5-phosphate to form a previously unknown intermediate, trans-anhydromevalonate 5-phosphate. Then, another enzyme belonging to the UbiD-decarboxylase family, which likely requires a UbiX-like partner, converts the intermediate into isopentenyl phosphate. Their activities were confirmed by in vitro assay with recombinant enzymes and were also detected in cell-free extract from A. pernix. These data distinguish the modified mevalonate pathway of A. pernix and likely, of the majority of archaea from all known mevalonate pathways, such as the eukaryote-type classical pathway, the haloarchaea-type modified pathway, and another modified pathway recently discovered from Thermoplasma acidophilum.
Journal Article
Genome-Wide Identification of the Aconitase Gene Family in Tomato (Solanum lycopersicum) and CRISPR-Based Functional Characterization of SlACO2 on Male-Sterility
by
Uluisik, Selman
,
Mostafa, Karam
,
Yıldırım, Kubilay
in
Aconitate Hydratase - metabolism
,
Amino acids
,
Chromosomes
2022
Tomato (Solanum lycopersicum) is one of the most cultivated vegetables in the world due to its consumption in a large variety of raw, cooked, or processed foods. Tomato breeding and productivity highly depend on the use of hybrid seeds and their higher yield, environmental adaption, and disease tolerance. However, the emasculation procedure during hybridization raises tomato seed production costs and labor expenses. Using male sterility is an effective way to reduce the cost of hybrid seeds and ensure cultivar purity. Recent developments in CRISPR genome editing technology enabled tomato breeders to investigate the male sterility genes and to develop male-sterile tomato lines. In the current study, the tomato Acotinase (SlACO) gene family was investigated via in silico tools and functionally characterized with CRISPR/Cas9-mediated gene disruption. Genome-wide blast and HMM search represented two SlACO genes located on different tomato chromosomes. Both genes were estimated to have a segmental duplication in the tomato genome due to their identical motif and domain structure. One of these genes, SlACO2, showed a high expression profile in all generative cells of tomato. Therefore, the SlACO2 gene was targeted with two different gRNA/Cas9 constructs to identify their functional role in tomatoes. The gene was mutated in a total of six genome-edited tomato lines, two of which were homozygous. Surprisingly, pollen viability was found to be extremely low in mutant plants compared to their wild-type (WT) counterparts. Likewise, the number of seeds per fruit also sharply decreased more than fivefold in mutant lines (10–12 seeds) compared to that in WT (67 seeds). The pollen shape, anther structures, and flower colors/shapes were not significantly varied between the mutant and WT tomatoes. The mutated lines were also subjected to salt and mannitol-mediated drought stress to test the effect of SlACO2 on abiotic stress tolerance. The results of the study indicated that mutant tomatoes have higher tolerance with significantly lower MDA content under stress conditions. This is the first CRISPR-mediated characterization of ACO genes on pollen viability, seed formation, and abiotic stress tolerance in tomatoes.
Journal Article
Aconitase 2 inhibits the proliferation of MCF-7 cells promoting mitochondrial oxidative metabolism and ROS/FoxO1-mediated autophagic response
by
Ciccarone, Fabio
,
Di Leo, Luca
,
Lazzarino, Giacomo
in
631/67/2327
,
631/80/39
,
Aconitate Hydratase - antagonists & inhibitors
2020
Background
Deregulation of the tricarboxylic acid cycle (TCA) due to mutations in specific enzymes or defective aerobic metabolism is associated with tumour growth. Aconitase 2 (ACO2) participates in the TCA cycle by converting citrate to isocitrate, but no evident demonstrations of its involvement in cancer metabolism have been provided so far.
Methods
Biochemical assays coupled with molecular biology, in silico, and cellular tools were applied to circumstantiate the impact of ACO2 in the breast cancer cell line MCF-7 metabolism. Fluorescence lifetime imaging microscopy (FLIM) of NADH was used to corroborate the changes in bioenergetics.
Results
We showed that ACO2 levels are decreased in breast cancer cell lines and human tumour biopsies. We generated ACO2- overexpressing MCF-7 cells and employed comparative analyses to identify metabolic adaptations. We found that increased ACO2 expression impairs cell proliferation and commits cells to redirect pyruvate to mitochondria, which weakens Warburg-like bioenergetic features. We also demonstrated that the enhancement of oxidative metabolism was supported by mitochondrial biogenesis and FoxO1-mediated autophagy/mitophagy that sustains the increased ROS burst.
Conclusions
This work identifies ACO2 as a relevant gene in cancer metabolic rewiring of MCF-7 cells, promoting a different utilisation of pyruvate and revealing the potential metabolic vulnerability of ACO2-associated malignancies.
Journal Article
Multimodal approaches for the improvement of the cellular folding of a recombinant iron regulatory protein in E. coli
by
Ravitchandirane, Gayathri
,
Bandhu, Sheetal
,
Chaudhuri, Tapan K.
in
Aconitate Hydratase - chemistry
,
Aconitate Hydratase - genetics
,
Aconitate Hydratase - metabolism
2022
Background
During the recombinant protein expression, most heterologous proteins expressed in
E. coli
cell factories are generated as insoluble and inactive aggregates, which prohibit
E. coli
from being employed as an expression host despite its numerous advantages and ease of use. The yeast mitochondrial aconitase protein, which has a tendency to aggregate when expressed in
E. coli
cells in the absence of heterologous chaperones GroEL/ES was utilised as a model to investigate how the modulation of physiological stimuli in the host cell can increase protein solubility. The presence of folding modulators such as exogenous molecular chaperones or osmolytes, as well as process variables such as incubation temperature, inducer concentrations, growth media are all important for cellular folding and are investigated in this study. This study also investigated how the cell's stress response system activates and protects the proteins from aggregation.
Results
The cells exposed to osmolytes plus a pre-induction heat shock showed a substantial increase in recombinant aconitase activity when combined with modulation of process conditions. The concomitant GroEL/ES expression further assists the folding of these soluble aggregates and increases the functional protein molecules in the cytoplasm of the recombinant
E. coli
cells.
Conclusions
The recombinant
E. coli
cells enduring physiological stress provide a cytosolic environment for the enhancement in the solubility and activity of the recombinant proteins. GroEL/ES-expressing cells not only aided in the folding of recombinant proteins, but also had an effect on the physiology of the expression host. The improvement in the specific growth rate and aconitase production during chaperone GroEL/ES co-expression is attributed to the reduction in overall cellular stress caused by the expression host's aggregation-prone recombinant protein expression.
Graphical Abstract
Journal Article
Metabolic engineering of itaconate production in Escherichia coli
by
Sanders, Johan P. M
,
Eggink, Gerrit
,
Vuoristo, Kiira S
in
acetate accumulation
,
Acetyltransferase
,
Acids
2015
Interest in sustainable development has led to efforts to replace petrochemical-based monomers with biomass-based ones. Itaconic acid, a C5-dicarboxylic acid, is a potential monomer for the chemical industry with many prospective applications. cis-aconitate decarboxylase (CadA) is the key enzyme of itaconate production, converting the citric acid cycle intermediate cis-aconitate into itaconate. Heterologous expression of cadA from Aspergillus terreus in Escherichia coli resulted in low CadA activities and production of trace amounts of itaconate on Luria-Bertani (LB) medium (<10 mg/L). CadA was primarily present as inclusion bodies, explaining the low activity. The activity was significantly improved by using lower cultivation temperatures and mineral medium, and this resulted in enhanced itaconate titres (240 mg/L). The itaconate titre was further increased by introducing citrate synthase and aconitase from Corynebacterium glutamicum and by deleting the genes encoding phosphate acetyltransferase and lactate dehydrogenase. These deletions in E. coli’s central metabolism resulted in the accumulation of pyruvate, which is a precursor for itaconate biosynthesis. As a result, itaconate production in aerobic bioreactor cultures was increased up to 690 mg/L. The maximum yield obtained was 0.09 mol itaconate/mol glucose. Strategies for a further improvement of itaconate production are discussed.
Journal Article
Mitochondrial Aconitase and Its Contribution to the Pathogenesis of Neurodegenerative Diseases
by
Padalko, Volodymyr
,
Adamczyk, Malgorzata
,
Posnik, Filip
in
Aconitase
,
Aconitate Hydratase - genetics
,
Aconitate Hydratase - metabolism
2024
This survey reviews modern ideas on the structure and functions of mitochondrial and cytosolic aconitase isoenzymes in eukaryotes. Cumulative experimental evidence about mitochondrial aconitases (Aco2) as one of the main targets of reactive oxygen and nitrogen species is generalized. The important role of Aco2 in maintenance of homeostasis of the intracellular iron pool and maintenance of the mitochondrial DNA is discussed. The role of Aco2 in the pathogenesis of some neurodegenerative diseases is highlighted. Inactivation or dysfunction of Aco2 as well as mutations found in the ACO2 gene appear to be significant factors in the development and promotion of various types of neurodegenerative diseases. A restoration of efficient mitochondrial functioning as a source of energy for the cell by targeting Aco2 seems to be one of the promising therapeutic directions to minimize progressive neurodegenerative disorders.
Journal Article