scholarly journals Dietary methionine restriction targets one carbon metabolism in humans and produces broad therapeutic responses in cancer

2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xia Gao ◽  
Sydney M. Sanderson ◽  
Ziwei Dai ◽  
Michael A. Reid ◽  
Daniel E. Cooper ◽  
...  

AbstractNutrition exerts profound effects on health and dietary interventions are commonly used to treat diseases of metabolic etiology. Although cancer has a substantial metabolic component, the principles that define whether nutrition may be used to influence tumour outcome are unclear. Nevertheless, it is established that targeting metabolic pathways with pharmacological agents or radiation can sometimes lead to controlled therapeutic outcomes. In contrast, whether specific dietary interventions could influence the metabolic pathways that are targeted in standard cancer therapies is not known. We now show that dietary restriction of methionine (MR), an essential amino acid, and the reduction of which has aging and obesogenic properties, influences cancer outcome through controlled and reproducible changes to one carbon metabolism. This pathway metabolizes methionine and further is the target of a host of cancer interventions involving chemotherapy and radiation. MR produced therapeutic responses in chemoresistant RAS-driven colorectal cancer patient derived xenografts and autochthonous KRASG12D+/−;TP53−/− -driven soft tissue sarcomas resistant to radiation. Metabolomics revealed the therapeutic mechanisms to occur through tumor cell autonomous effects on the flux through one carbon metabolism that impacted redox and nucleotide metabolism, thus interacting with the antimetabolite or radiation intervention. Finally, in a controlled and tolerated feeding study in humans, MR resulted in similar effects on systemic metabolism as obtained in responsive mice. These findings provide evidence that a targeted dietary manipulation can affect specific tumor cell metabolism to mediate broad aspects of cancer outcome.

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hyo Sub Choi ◽  
Ajay Bhat ◽  
Marshall B. Howington ◽  
Megan L. Schaller ◽  
Rebecca Cox ◽  
...  

Flavin containing monooxygenases (FMOs) are promiscuous enzymes known for metabolizing a wide range of exogenous compounds. In C. elegans, fmo-2 expression increases lifespan and healthspan downstream of multiple longevity-promoting pathways through an unknown mechanism. Here, we report that, contrary to its classification as a xenobiotic enzyme, fmo-2 expression leads to rewiring of endogenous metabolism principally through changes in one carbon metabolism (OCM). Using computer modeling, we identify decreased methylation as the major OCM flux modified by FMO-2 that is sufficient to recapitulate its longevity benefits. We further find that tryptophan is decreased in multiple mammalian FMO overexpression models and is a validated substrate for FMO enzymes. Our resulting model connects a single enzyme to two previously unconnected key metabolic pathways and provides a framework for the metabolic interconnectivity of longevity-promoting pathways such as dietary restriction. FMOs are well-conserved enzymes that are also induced by lifespan-extending interventions in mice, supporting a conserved and critical role in promoting health and longevity through metabolic remodeling.


2020 ◽  
pp. jbc.RA120.016069
Author(s):  
Goce Taleski ◽  
Diana Schuhmacher ◽  
Henry Su ◽  
Jean-Marie Sontag ◽  
Estelle Sontag

The nonreceptor protein tyrosine kinase Fyn and protein Ser/Thr phosphatase 2A (PP2A) are major multifunctional signaling molecules. Deregulation of Fyn and altered PP2A methylation are implicated in cancer and Alzheimer disease (AD). Here, we tested the hypothesis that the methylation state of PP2A catalytic subunit, which influences PP2A subunit composition and substrate specificity, can affect Fyn regulation and function. Using N2a neuroblastoma cell models, we first show that methylated PP2A holoenzymes containing the Bα subunit co-immunoprecipitate and co-purify with Fyn in membrane rafts. PP2A methylation status regulates Fyn distribution and Fyn-dependent neuritogenesis, likely in part by affecting actin dynamics. A methylation incompetent PP2A mutant fails to interact with Fyn. It perturbs the normal partitioning of Fyn and amyloid precursor protein (APP) in membrane microdomains, which governs Fyn function and APP processing. This correlates with enhanced amyloidogenic cleavage of APP, a hallmark of AD pathogenesis. Conversely, enhanced PP2A methylation promotes the nonamyloidogenic cleavage of APP in a Fyn-dependent manner. Disturbances in one-carbon metabolic pathways that control cellular methylation are associated with AD and cancer. Notably, they induce a parallel loss of membrane-associated methylated PP2A and Fyn enzymes in N2a cells and acute mouse brain slices. One-carbon metabolism also modulates Fyn-dependent process outgrowth in N2a cells. Thus, our findings identify a novel methylation dependent PP2A/Fyn signaling module. They highlight the underestimated importance of crosstalks between essential metabolic pathways and signaling scaffolds that are involved in normal cell homeostasis and currently being targeted for cancer and AD treatment.


2010 ◽  
Vol 80 (45) ◽  
pp. 319-329 ◽  
Author(s):  
Allyson A. West ◽  
Marie A. Caudill

Folate and choline are water-soluble micronutrients that serve as methyl donors in the conversion of homocysteine to methionine. Inadequacy of these nutrients can disturb one-carbon metabolism as evidenced by alterations in circulating folate and/or plasma homocysteine. Among common genetic variants that reside in genes regulating folate absorptive and metabolic processes, homozygosity for the MTHFR 677C > T variant has consistently been shown to have robust effects on status markers. This paper will review the impact of genetic variants in folate-metabolizing genes on folate and choline bioefficacy. Nutrient-gene and gene-gene interactions will be considered along with the need to account for these genetic variants when updating dietary folate and choline recommendations.


Proceedings ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 8 (1) ◽  
pp. 19
Author(s):  
Nicola Gillies ◽  
Amber M. Milan ◽  
Pankaja Sharma ◽  
Brenan Durainayagam ◽  
Sarah M. Mitchell ◽  
...  

Background: Maintaining optimal status of folate and metabolically [...]


2021 ◽  
Vol 21 (4) ◽  
pp. 206-206
Author(s):  
Felix Clemens Richter ◽  
Alexander J. Clarke

Toxicology ◽  
2021 ◽  
pp. 152803
Author(s):  
Ahlam Abuawad ◽  
Anne K. Bozack ◽  
Roheeni Saxena ◽  
Mary V. Gamble

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