| Literature DB >> 32391394 |
Alexander Wilcox1,2, Michael Murphy1,2, Douglass Tucker1,2, David Laprade1, Breton Roussel1, Christopher Chin3, Victoria Hallisey1, Noah Kozub1, Abraham Brass3, Nicanor Austriaco1.
Abstract
Sulforaphane (SFN) is a compound [1-isothiocyanato-4-(methylsulfinyl)-butane] found in broccoli and other cruciferous vegetables that is currently of interest because of its potential as a chemopreventive and a chemotherapeutic drug. Recent studies in a diverse range of cellular and animal models have shown that SFN is involved in multiple intracellular pathways that regulate xenobiotic metabolism, inflammation, cell death, cell cycle progression, and epigenetic regulation. In order to better understand the mechanisms of action behind SFN-induced cell death, we undertook an unbiased genome wide screen with the yeast knockout (YKO) library to identify SFN sensitive (SFNS) mutants. The mutants were enriched with knockouts in genes linked to vacuolar function suggesting a link between this organelle and SFN's mechanism of action in yeast. Our subsequent work revealed that SFN increases the vacuolar pH of yeast cells and that varying the vacuolar pH can alter the sensitivity of yeast cells to the drug. In fact, several mutations that lower the vacuolar pH in yeast actually made the cells resistant to SFN (SFNR). Finally, we show that human lung cancer cells with more acidic compartments are also SFNR suggesting that SFN's mechanism of action identified in yeast may carry over to higher eukaryotic cells. Copyright:Entities:
Keywords: acidification; sulforaphane; vacuoles; yeast
Year: 2020 PMID: 32391394 PMCID: PMC7199281 DOI: 10.15698/mic2020.05.716
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Microb Cell ISSN: 2311-2638
Figure 2FIGURE 2: SFN alters the acidification of the yeast vacuole.
(A) Ten-fold serial dilutions of wild type yeast cells from the BY4742 strain background and of representative mutant strains that were either SFNS or SFNR were plated on synthetic defined (SD) media with 400 µg/mL SFN, and allowed to grow at 30°C for two days. Deletions in genes known to increase vacuolar pH (VMA2) increased the sensitivity of cells to SFN, while deletions in genes known to decrease vacuolar pH (RRG8 and SUR1) increased the resistance of cells to the drug. (B) Functional annotation utilizing gene ontology (GO) terms revealed that our screen had preferentially isolated mutants in genes involved in vacuolar function, especially in vacuolar acidification and/or pH regulation. Asterisks indicate statistical significance of the enrichment of ORFs identified in the screen as compared to their representation in the genome (* p<0.05; ** p<0.01; *** p<0.001). (C) Wild type cells from the PSY316 and the BY4742 strain backgrounds were grown in SD liquid cultures with and without 200 μg/mL of SFN, and were stained with the vacuole specific, pH-sensitive dye, BCECF-AM. Cells grown in SFN were significantly more fluorescent than their counterparts grown in media without drug. (D) The vacuolar pH of the cells imaged in Figure 2C was estimated from a calibration curve that plotted the vacuolar pH of fields of cells grown in APG media titrated to different pH values against the fluorescence intensities measured by the LSM700. Error bars indicate standard deviations for trials with at least three independent cultures. The difference in viabilities was deemed statistically significant by the Student's t-test comparing cells grown in SFN with control cells grown without drug (*** p<0.001). Scale bars indicate a width of 10 µm. (E) 10-fold serial dilutions of wild type yeast cells from the BY4742 strain background cultured in synthetic defined liquid cultures containing the indicated drugs for the indicated time periods (BITC=0.746 µg/mL, PEITC=0.094 µg/mL, SFN=400 µg/mL), were plated on SD media and allowed to grow at 30°C for two days. (F) Wild type cells from the BY4742 strain background were grown in SD liquid cultures containing the indicated drugs for two hours and were stained with the vacuole specific, pH-sensitive dye, BCECF-AM. Cells grown in SFN were fluorescent while their counterparts grown in media with the other drugs were not. Scale bars indicate a width of 10 µm. (G) The vacuolar pH of the cells imaged in Figure 2F was estimated from a calibration curve that plotted the vacuolar pH of cells grown in APG media titrated to different pH values against the fluorescence intensities measured by the LSM700. Error bars indicate standard deviations for trials with at least three independent cultures. The difference in viabilities was deemed statistically significant by the Student's t-test comparing cells grown with the indicated drug with control cells grown without the drug (*** p<0.001).