Cysteinyl-tRNA synthetase governs cysteine polysulfidation and mitochondrial bioenergetics

Takaaki Akaike(Tohoku University), Tomoaki Ida(Tohoku University), Fan‐Yan Wei(Kumamoto University), Motohiro Nishida(Kyushu University), Yoshito Kumagai(University of Tsukuba), Md. Morshedul Alam(Tohoku University), Hideshi Ihara(Osaka Prefecture University), Tomohiro Sawa(Kumamoto University), Tetsuro Matsunaga(Tohoku University), Shingo Kasamatsu(Tohoku University), Akiyuki Nishimura(National Institutes of Natural Sciences), Masanobu Morita(Tohoku University), Kazuhito Tomizawa(Kumamoto University), Akira Nishimura(National Institutes of Natural Sciences), Satoshi Watanabe(Tohoku University), Kenji Inaba(Tohoku University), Hiroshi Shima(Miyagi Prefectural Hospital Organization), Nobuhiro Tanuma(Miyagi Prefectural Hospital Organization), Minkyung Jung(Tohoku University), Shigemoto Fujii(Tohoku University), Yasuo Watanabe(Showa Pharmaceutical University), Masaki Ohmuraya(Hyogo Medical University), Péter Nagy(National Institute of Oncology), Martin Feelisch(Southampton General Hospital), Jon M. Fukuto(Sonoma State University), Hozumi Motohashi(Tohoku University)
Nature Communications
October 23, 2017
Cited by 538Open Access
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Abstract

Cysteine hydropersulfide (CysSSH) occurs in abundant quantities in various organisms, yet little is known about its biosynthesis and physiological functions. Extensive persulfide formation is apparent in cysteine-containing proteins in Escherichia coli and mammalian cells and is believed to result from post-translational processes involving hydrogen sulfide-related chemistry. Here we demonstrate effective CysSSH synthesis from the substrate L-cysteine, a reaction catalyzed by prokaryotic and mammalian cysteinyl-tRNA synthetases (CARSs). Targeted disruption of the genes encoding mitochondrial CARSs in mice and human cells shows that CARSs have a crucial role in endogenous CysSSH production and suggests that these enzymes serve as the principal cysteine persulfide synthases in vivo. CARSs also catalyze co-translational cysteine polysulfidation and are involved in the regulation of mitochondrial biogenesis and bioenergetics. Investigating CARS-dependent persulfide production may thus clarify aberrant redox signaling in physiological and pathophysiological conditions, and suggest therapeutic targets based on oxidative stress and mitochondrial dysfunction.


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