Reversal of mitochondrial malate dehydrogenase 2 enables anaplerosis via redox rescue in respiration-deficient cells
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Show full item recordEditorial
Elsevier
Materia
Respiration Metabolism Redox Redox transfer Mitochondrion Anaplerosis Cancer Cancer metabolism
Date
2022-12-01Referencia bibliográfica
Altea-Manzano et al. Reversal of mitochondrial malate dehydrogenase 2 enables anaplerosis via redox rescue in respiration-deficient cells, 2022, Molecular Cell 82, 4537–4547 [https://doi.org/10.1016/j.molcel.2022.10.005]
Sponsorship
Marie Sklodowska-Curie Actions; Beug Foundation; Fonds Wetenschappelijk Onderzoek (FWO Vlaanderen); Cancer Research UK Career Development Fellowship (C47559/A16243); European Research Council under the ERC Consolidator grant agreement no. 771486–MetaRegulation; FWO Projects; Fonds Baillet Latour; KU Leuven- FTBO/Internal Funding; Wellcome Trust-ISSF grant; Barts Charity (MGU0404); Cancer Research UK Centre Grant to Barts Cancer Institute (C355/A25137)Abstract
Inhibition of the electron transport chain (ETC) prevents the regeneration of mitochondrial NAD+, resulting in cessation of the oxidative tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle and a consequent dependence upon reductive carboxylation for aspartate synthesis. NAD+ regeneration alone in the cytosol can rescue the viability of ETC-deficient cells. Yet, how this occurs and whether transfer of oxidative equivalents to the mitochondrion is required remain unknown. Here, we show that inhibition of the ETC drives reversal of the mitochondrial aspartate transaminase (GOT2) as well as malate and succinate dehydrogenases (MDH2 and SDH) to transfer oxidative NAD+ equivalents into the mitochondrion. This supports the NAD+-dependent activity of the mitochondrial glutamate dehydrogenase (GDH) and thereby enables anaplerosis—the entry of glutamine-derived carbon into the TCA cycle and connected biosynthetic pathways. Thus, under impaired ETC function, the cytosolic redox state is communicated into the mitochondrion and acts as a rheostat to support GDH activity and cell viability.