| Literature DB >> 35744859 |
Abstract
Molybdenum cofactor (Moco) biosynthesis requires iron, copper, and ATP. The Moco-containing enzyme sulfite oxidase catalyzes terminal oxidation in oxidative cysteine catabolism, and another Moco-containing enzyme, xanthine dehydrogenase, functions in purine catabolism. Thus, molybdenum enzymes participate in metabolic pathways that are essential for cellular detoxication and energy dynamics. Studies of the Moco biosynthetic enzymes MoaE (in the Ada2a-containing (ATAC) histone acetyltransferase complex) and MOCS2 have revealed that Moco biosynthesis and molybdenum enzymes align to regulate signaling and metabolism via control of transcription and translation. Disruption of these functions is involved in the onset of dementia and neurodegenerative disease. This review provides an overview of the roles of MoaE and MOCS2 in normal cellular processes and neurodegenerative disease, as well as directions for future research.Entities:
Keywords: ATAC; MOCS2; MPTAC; MoaE; neurodegenerative disease; nucleotide metabolism; sulfur catabolism
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35744859 PMCID: PMC9228816 DOI: 10.3390/molecules27123733
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Molecules ISSN: 1420-3049 Impact factor: 4.927
Figure 1MBIP may be evolutionarily derived from MoaE. Schematic representation of phylogenetics of the MoaE and MBIP domains. The MBIP sequence in Drosophila Mocs2B/dMoaE, which is conserved in the C-terminus of human MBIP, is essential for incorporation into ATAC (red line).
Figure 2MOCS2 translationally responds to inflammation, DNA alkylation signaling, and nutritionally challenging environments (e.g., limited acetyl-CoA and sulfur amino acids). MPTAC regulates sulfur amino acid catabolism in which SUOX catalyzes the oxidation of sulfite, which contains a sulfite ion (SO32−), to sulfate (SO42−) in the terminal step. This prevents accumulation of toxic sulfite and ROS generated from disordered sulfur amino acid catabolism. XDH activity requires Moco. XDH is converted into XO in the inflammatory environment. Increased XO activity produces superoxide ion (O2•–) and hydrogen peroxide (H2O2), sources of alkylating agents that trigger DNA alkylation damage. MutSa responds to DNA alkylation damage (O6-methylguanine, O6meG) in a MPTAC- and ATAC-dependent manner. DNA alkylation damage signaling by the association of MutSa, MPTAC, and ATAC promotes mevalonate pathways, leading to sterol synthesis and resulting in an anti-inflammation response and a reduction in alkylating agents. XDH loads MOCS2 mRNA onto polysomes, promoting MOCS2 protein synthesis. Therefore, XDH promotes DNA alkylation damage signaling via promotion of MPTAC expression, which is essential for MutSa stability. Overall, in inflammatory environments, XDH is converted into XO, which induces apoptosis of toxic cells carrying mutations via the production of alkylating agents. MPTAC promotes fatty acid β-oxidation, which generates acetyl-CoA in nutritionally challenging environments. Acetyl-CoA is essential for initiation of the mevalonate pathway. MPTAC also maintains cellular levels of SAMe, which is required for methylation at N7G in mRNA. Thus, MOCS2 in MPTAC coordinates the utilization of acetyl-CoA and SAMe.