| Literature DB >> 32051057 |
Irina Borodina1, Louise C Kenny2, Cathal M McCarthy3,4, Kalaivani Paramasivan1, Etheresia Pretorius5, Timothy J Roberts5,6, Steven A van der Hoek1, Douglas B Kell1,5,6.
Abstract
Ergothioneine (ERG) is an unusual thio-histidine betaine amino acid that has potent antioxidant activities. It is synthesised by a variety of microbes, especially fungi (including in mushroom fruiting bodies) and actinobacteria, but is not synthesised by plants and animals who acquire it via the soil and their diet, respectively. Animals have evolved a highly selective transporter for it, known as solute carrier family 22, member 4 (SLC22A4) in humans, signifying its importance, and ERG may even have the status of a vitamin. ERG accumulates differentially in various tissues, according to their expression of SLC22A4, favouring those such as erythrocytes that may be subject to oxidative stress. Mushroom or ERG consumption seems to provide significant prevention against oxidative stress in a large variety of systems. ERG seems to have strong cytoprotective status, and its concentration is lowered in a number of chronic inflammatory diseases. It has been passed as safe by regulatory agencies, and may have value as a nutraceutical and antioxidant more generally.Entities:
Keywords: Cytoprotectants; Ergothioneine; Nutraceuticals; Oxidative stress; SLC22A4
Year: 2020 PMID: 32051057 PMCID: PMC7653990 DOI: 10.1017/S0954422419000301
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nutr Res Rev ISSN: 0954-4224 Impact factor: 7.800
Fig. 1.Structures of ergothioneine and related molecules. For a colour figure, see the online version of the paper.
Fig. 2.The two main pathways of aerobic ergothioneine (ERG) biosynthesis, noting the relevant enzymes and thumbnails of three-dimensional structures where known. SAM, S-adenosyl methionine. For a colour figure, see the online version of the paper.
Biosynthesis of ergothioneine in various non-recombinant micro-organisms
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Fig. 3.Alignment of Neurospora crassa Egt1 and N-terminal part of Mycobacterium tuberculosis EgtD. For a colour figure, see the online version of the paper.
Fermentative production of ergothioneine in recombinant micro-organisms
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| Expression of | 231·0 mg/kg of media | Cultivation on solid, rice-based medium |
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| Expression of | 24 ( | Shake flasks. Medium supplemented with yeast extract, His, Met, 20 m |
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| Expression of the following genes: | 1·3 g/l (extracellular) | Fed-batch in 3-litre bioreactor, 216 h. Complex medium supplemented with IPTG, ammonium ferric citrate, pyridoxine, Met, His, and thiosulfate |
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| Additional copy of egtBD expressed from a plasmid, deletion of histidine ammonia-lyase ( | 20 mg/l | Test-tubes. Complex medium with methanol |
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| 598 ( | Fed-batch fermentation in 1-litre bioreactor, 84 h. Defined medium supplemented with arginine, histidine, methionine and pyridoxine |
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| 368 mg/l | N and glucose starvation. Cultivation method not given |
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IPTG, isopropyl β- d-1-thiogalactopyranoside.
Fig. 4.Differences in expression of SLC22A4 transcript in a series of mammalian cell lines. Data are from Thul et al.( and O’Hagan et al.(. For a colour figure, see the online version of the paper.
Fig. 5.Superoxide and peroxide are produced by 1- and 2-electron reduction of dioxygen by the mammalian respiratory chain. For a colour figure, see the online version of the paper.
Fig. 6.Catalytic roles of unliganded iron in hydroxyl radical production via the Fenton and Haber–Weiss reactions. This can be stopped by ensuring that iron is fully liganded. For a colour figure, see the online version of the paper.
Concentrations of ergothioneine in human serum
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| Crohn’s disease | 7 µg/ml |
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| Healthy volunteer | 38 µg/ml |
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| Healthy 1–10 years | 15–20 µg/ml |
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| Healthy 11–18 years | 37 µg/ml |
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| Healthy 19–50 years | 23–30 µg/ml |
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| Healthy middle-aged and older | Median 1 μ | Inverse correlation with age |
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| Mice on normal diet | 58 µg/ml |
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Molecular weight = 229·3, so 1 mm = 229 mg/l.
Biological properties whose expression or activity varies on exposure of a biological system to ergothioneine (ERG) or a modulation of SLC22A4 activity
| Determinand | System | Comments | Selected reference(s) |
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| Cataract formation induced by glucocorticoid | Developing chick embryo | ERG inhibits |
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| Cell death | Human neuronal hybridoma cell line N-18-RE-105 | H2O2 challenge |
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| Protection from amyloid-β-induced cell death |
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| Cell injury | Rat pheochromocytoma cells | Methylglyoxal challenge |
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| Cell proliferation | K562 cells | Involvement of SLC22A4 |
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| Caco-2 cells | Involvement of SLC22A4 |
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| Diabetic embryopathy | Rats | ERG reduced it to control levels |
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| DNA damage in mitochondria | HeLa, RAW 264·7, HaCaT, PC12 cells | siRNA knockdown of SLC22A4 |
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| Embryo development | Sheep | Improvement, despite non-uptake of ERG |
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| Embryo quality and maturation | Cows | Improvement |
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| Excitotoxicity caused by | Rat | Protection by ERG |
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| Glycolysis | Erythrocytes | Preservation of lactate production during starvation |
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| Hepatocyte injury induced by CCl4 | Hepatocytes | Protection, also by β-hydroxy derivative |
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| Immune modulation | Mouse macrophages | Skewing towards a Th17 response |
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| Immunotherapy | Tumour cells | Improved vaccine responses by dampening cytotoxic T-lymphocyte suppression |
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| IL-8 | Alveolar macrophages | H2O2 and TNF-α induction. Possible intermediacy of NF-κB |
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| Fe incorporation into protoporphyrin | Erythrocyte fractions | Said to keep Fe reduced; does not seem to have been confirmed |
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| Kidney fibrosis | Mice | Worsens during chronic kidney disease if SLC22A4 removed |
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| Lipid peroxidation | HeLa, RAW 264·7, HaCaT, PC12 cells | siRNA knockdown of SLC22A4 |
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| Free radical initiated with anthracyclines |
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| Lung injury | Rats | Cytokine treatment; damage prevented by ERG |
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| Memory | C57BL/6J mice | Attenuates memory loss induced by |
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| Metal ion chelation | Co++, Cu++, Ni++, Zn++ | Direct and within enzymes |
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| Cu++>Hg++>Zn++> | IR measurements |
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| Cu++ | NMR |
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| Cu++ | Chelation prevents DNA damage |
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| Cu++ | Chelation prevents DNA damage |
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| Hg++ | In intact erythrocytes, after glutathione |
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| Mutagenesis protection | Multiple | Often involving singlet oxygen |
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| Neuronal differentiation | Neural progenitor cells | ERG stimulated differentiation |
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| NF-κB | MH7A cells | Affects SLC22A4 expression |
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| Nrf2 | HaCaT skin cells | Anti-apoptotic following UV irradiation |
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| ERG stimulates |
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| S6K1 mTOR and neurotrophin 4/5-TrkB | Neural stem cells | Rapid induction after ERG exposure |
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| Sickle cell anaemia | ERG is protective |
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| SIRT1 and SIRT6 | Endothelial cells | Protection |
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| Sperm motility | Boars | Protection |
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siRNA, small interfering RNA; mTOR, mammalian target of rapamycin; SIRT, sirtuin.
Fig. 7.Overview of some of the effects of ergothioneine in mammalian systems. For a colour figure, see the online version of the paper.