What is known: Disulfide reduction-fueled enzymes s!upport homeostasis and combat oxidative damage that
contributes to neurodegeneration, inflammatory diseases, and cancer. NADPH provides the reducing power for
most anabolic and cytoprotective reduction reactions, yet only two enzymes can use NADPH to reduce
cytosolic disulfides: thioredoxin reductase-1 (TrxR1) and glutathione reductase (Gsr) 1. Both TrxR1 and Gsr have
active sites that are dominantly inhibited by electrophilic toxins and oxidants 2, 3. In Co-PI Schmidt’s lab, mice
with TrxR1/Gsr-null livers uncovered unexpected robustness in the disulfide reductase systems, including an
NADPH-independent pathway that uses catabolism of methionine (Met) to sustain redox homeostasis 4.
Importantly, this pathway is also thought to sustain normal cells under oxidative or electrophilic stress 5. Met and
Cys are the 2 sulfur (S)-amino acids found in proteins, but S-containing molecules synthesized from Met or Cys,
including S-adenosyl-Met (SAM), glutathione (GSH), CoA, and others, are also important in redox, detox,
energetics, biosynthesis, regulation, and other processes. Co-PI DeNicola has been studying the roles of altered
S-amino acid metabolism in sustaining some cancers6. These studies are revealing how some cancers use
altered S-amino acid redox metabolism, which could uncover targetable cancer-specific susceptibilities.
Unresolved questions: It remains unknown how other metabolic activities, including those that directly utilize
Met or Cys, as well as more peripheral systems that either (i) supply resources to these pathways; (ii) depend
upon these pathways; or (iii) might, in some conditions, compete with these pathways for substrates, are
realigned to help cells survive stress. We hypothesize that conversion to Met-dependence involves realignment
of diverse metabolic pathways. This work is significant because a better understanding of these processes will
uncover processes that can be therapeutically targeted to either specifically increase the robustness of critical
cells under oxidative or toxic stress, or specifically increase the vulnerability of pathogenic cells in cancer or
inflammatory diseases. New preliminary investigations in this resubmission demonstrate our ability to perform
stable isotope flux labeling studies in whole mice and in mouse-derived hepatic organoids.
What is proposed: In this revised multi-institution collaborative project, we will define the metabolic pathway
realignments that occur when hepatocytes switch from NADPH-dependent to -independent disulfide reduction.
We propose 3 Specific Aims: Aim 1, Define how NADPH- versus Met-fueled disulfide reductase homeostasis
influences S-metabolism prioritization. Aim 2, Define how re-wiring of serine metabolism supports Met-fueled
disulfide reductase homeostasis. Aim 3, Test whether Met-dependent survival increases the activity and
dependence on liver methyltransferases.
Anticipated outcomes, value: This project will help us understand how global shifts in hepatic metabolism
occurs in response to severe oxidative or electrophilic stress in liver, and how this helps sustain health.