NADPH is a pivotal cofactor that maintains redox homeostasis and lipogenesis in cancer cells and interference with NADPH production is a promising approach for treating cancer. However, how normal and cancer cells differentially exploit NADPH-producing pathways is unclear, and selective approaches to targeting NADPH are lacking. Here, we show that the assayed cancer cell lines preferentially depend on ME1-mediated NADPH production. ME1 knockdown increases intracellular ROS levels and impairs lipogenesis in cancer cells, leading to retarded proliferation and increased anoikis, while sparing normal cells. Notably, ME1 interference ultimately resulted in adaptive upregulation of mitochondrial IDH2 dependent of AMPK-FoxO1 activation to replenish the NADPH pool and mitigate cytosolic ROS. Combining ME1 ablation and IDH2 inhibition drastically reduces intracellular NADPH and prevents resistance to ME1 interference, resulting in increased apoptosis and impeded tumor growth and metastasis. This study demonstrates that cytosolic ME1 integrated with mitochondrial IDH2 is essential for tumor growth and metastasis, thereby highlighting the blockade of metabolic compensation by disrupting mitochondrial-cytosol NADPH transport as a promising approach to selectively targeting NADPH in cancer cells that rely on NADPH-driven antioxidant systems.
The Ginkgo biloba leave extract (GbE) is widely applied in the prevention and treatment of atherosclerotic cardiovascular diseases in clinical practice. However, its mechanism of actions has not been totally elucidated. In this study, we confirmed the beneficial effects of GbE in alleviating hypercholesterolemia, inflammation and atherosclerosis in Ldlr À/À mice, which were fed 12 weeks of Western diet (WD). Moreover, 16S rRNA sequencing revealed that GbE treatment reshaped the WDperturbed intestinal microbiota, particularly decreased the Firmicutes/Bacteroidetes ratio and elevated the abundance of Akkermansia, Alloprevotella, Alistipes, and Parabacteroides. Furthermore, GbE treatment downregulated the intestinal transcriptional levels of proinflammatory cytokines and enhanced the expression of tight junction proteins, exerting the roles of attenuating the intestinal inflammation as well as repairing the gut barrier. Meanwhile, the targeted metabolomic analysis displayed that GbE treatment significantly reversed the dysfunction of the microbial metabolic phenotypes, including promoting the production of short chain fatty acids, indole-3-acetate and secondary bile acids, which were correlated with the atherosclerotic plaque areas. Finally, we confirmed GbE-altered gut microbiota was sufficient to alleviate atherosclerosis by fecal microbiota transplantation. In summary, our findings provide important insights into the pharmacological mechanism underlying the antiatherogenic efficacy of GbE.
We report a living cell-target responsive accessibility profiling (LC-TRAP) approach to identify the targetome of silibinin (SIL), a well-established hepatoprotective natural product (NP), in HepG2 cells. Proteins showing accessibility changes, probed by covalent lysine labeling reagents and leveraged by multiplexed quantitative proteomics, following the administration of SIL to the living cells were assigned as potential targets. Among the assigned targetome, ACSL4, an enzyme essential for ferroptosis induction, might be involved in the hepatoprotective effects of SIL and hence was intensively validated. We first demonstrated that SIL protected HepG2 cells from ferroptosis dependent on ACSL4. Then, we used biophysical assays and a SIL-derivatized chemical probe to corroborate that SIL can bind to ACSL4. The ensuing enzymatic assays showed that SIL inhibited ACSL4 enzymatic activity, thereby mitigating the ACSL4-mediated ferroptosis. As such, we revealed that ACSL4 inhibition, using SIL as a model compound, represents a promising hepatoprotective strategy. Further, since TRAP probes the accessibility changes of reactive proteinaceous lysines, it can pinpoint the proximal regions where the ligand engagement may occur. Thus, the LC-TRAP analysis of SIL, the newly discovered ligand of ACSL4, and arachidonic acid (AA), the substrate, intriguingly showed that SIL and AA both affected the conformation of the K536-proximal region of ACSL4, albeit through distinct binding patterns. Collectively, we describe a straightforward LC-TRAP workflow that does not involve ligand-derived probe synthesis and is widely applicable to target discovery of NPs.
Sepsis, a systemic inflammatory response syndrome (SIRS) caused by infection, is a major public health concern with limited therapeutic options. Infection disturbs the homeostasis of host, resulting in excessive inflammation and immune suppression. This has prompted the clinical use of immunomodulators to balance host response as an alternative therapeutic strategy. Here, we report that Thymopentin (TP5), a synthetic immunomodulator pentapeptide (Arg‐Lys‐Asp‐Val‐Tyr) with an excellent safety profile in the clinic, protects mice against cecal ligation and puncture (CLP)‐induced sepsis, as shown by improved survival rate, decreased level of pro‐inflammatory cytokines and reduced ratios of macrophages and neutrophils in spleen and peritoneum. Regarding mechanism, TP5 changed the characteristics of LPS‐stimulated macrophages by increasing the production of 15‐deoxy‐Δ12,14‐prostaglandin J2 (15‐d‐PGJ2). In addition, the improved effect of TP5 on survival rates was abolished by the peroxisome proliferator‐activated receptor γ (PPARγ) antagonist GW9662. Our results uncover the mechanism of the TP5 protective effects on CLP‐induced sepsis and shed light on the development of TP5 as a therapeutic strategy for lethal systemic inflammatory disorders.
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