Literature DB >> 22430869

Mitochondrial adaptations to utilize hydrogen sulfide for energy and signaling.

Kenneth R Olson1.   

Abstract

Sulfur is a versatile molecule with oxidation states ranging from -2 to +6. From the beginning, sulfur has been inexorably entwined with the evolution of organisms. Reduced sulfur, prevalent in the prebiotic Earth and supplied from interstellar sources, was an integral component of early life as it could provide energy through oxidization, even in a weakly oxidizing environment, and it spontaneously reacted with iron to form iron-sulfur clusters that became the earliest biological catalysts and structural components of cells. The ability to cycle sulfur between reduced and oxidized states may have been key in the great endosymbiotic event that incorporated a sulfide-oxidizing α-protobacteria into a host sulfide-reducing Archea, resulting in the eukaryotic cell. As eukaryotes slowly adapted from a sulfidic and anoxic (euxinic) world to one that was highly oxidizing, numerous mechanisms developed to deal with increasing oxidants; namely, oxygen, and decreasing sulfide. Because there is rarely any reduced sulfur in the present-day environment, sulfur was historically ignored by biologists, except for an occasional report of sulfide toxicity. Twenty-five years ago, it became evident that the organisms in sulfide-rich environments could synthesize ATP from sulfide, 10 years later came the realization that animals might use sulfide as a signaling molecule, and only within the last 4 years did it become apparent that even mammals could derive energy from sulfide generated in the gastrointestinal tract. It has also become evident that, even in the present-day oxic environment, cells can exploit the redox chemistry of sulfide, most notably as a physiological transducer of oxygen availability. This review will examine how the legacy of sulfide metabolism has shaped natural selection and how some of these ancient biochemical pathways are still employed by modern-day eukaryotes.

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Year:  2012        PMID: 22430869     DOI: 10.1007/s00360-012-0654-y

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Comp Physiol B        ISSN: 0174-1578            Impact factor:   2.200


  121 in total

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2.  Organic compound synthesis on the primitive earth.

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Review 3.  Luminal sulfide and large intestine mucosa: friend or foe?

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4.  Combined treatment with oral metronidazole and N-acetylcysteine is effective in ethylmalonic encephalopathy.

Authors:  Carlo Viscomi; Alberto B Burlina; Imad Dweikat; Mario Savoiardo; Costanza Lamperti; Tatjana Hildebrandt; Valeria Tiranti; Massimo Zeviani
Journal:  Nat Med       Date:  2010-07-25       Impact factor: 53.440

5.  Oxidation of hydrogen sulfide and methanethiol to thiosulfate by rat tissues: a specialized function of the colonic mucosa.

Authors:  J Furne; J Springfield; T Koenig; E DeMaster; M D Levitt
Journal:  Biochem Pharmacol       Date:  2001-07-15       Impact factor: 5.858

6.  Coexistence of bacterial sulfide oxidizers, sulfate reducers, and spirochetes in a gutless worm (Oligochaeta) from the Peru margin.

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7.  Using a functional enzyme model to understand the chemistry behind hydrogen sulfide induced hibernation.

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8.  Hydrogen sulfide as an oxygen sensor in trout gill chemoreceptors.

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9.  Loss of ETHE1, a mitochondrial dioxygenase, causes fatal sulfide toxicity in ethylmalonic encephalopathy.

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10.  Morphologic evidence of diffuse vascular damage in human and in the experimental model of ethylmalonic encephalopathy.

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  18 in total

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Review 4.  Carbon monoxide, hydrogen sulfide, and nitric oxide as signaling molecules in the gastrointestinal tract.

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Review 5.  Chemical foundations of hydrogen sulfide biology.

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Review 6.  Hydrogen sulfide, an enhancer of vascular nitric oxide signaling: mechanisms and implications.

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Review 7.  Hydrogen sulfide as an oxygen sensor.

Authors:  Kenneth R Olson
Journal:  Antioxid Redox Signal       Date:  2014-07-30       Impact factor: 8.401

8.  Key bioactive reaction products of the NO/H2S interaction are S/N-hybrid species, polysulfides, and nitroxyl.

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9.  A case of mistaken identity: are reactive oxygen species actually reactive sulfide species?

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