Abstract

Hydrogen sulfide is synthesized by enzymes involved in sulfur metabolism and oxidized via a dedicated mitochondrial pathway that intersects with the electron transport chain at the level of complex III. Studies with H2S are challenging since it is volatile and also reacts with oxidized thiols in the culture medium, forming sulfane sulfur species. The half-life of exogenously added H2S to cultured cells is unknown. In this study, we first examined the half-life of exogenously added H2S to human colonic epithelial cells. In plate cultures, H2S disappeared with a t1/2 of 3 to 4 min at 37 °C with a small fraction being trapped as sulfane sulfur species. In suspension cultures, the rate of abiotic loss of H2S was slower, and we demonstrated that sulfide stimulated aerobic glycolysis, which was sensitive to the mitochondrial but not the cytoplasmic NADH pool. Oxidation of mitochondrial NADH using the genetically encoded mito-LbNOX tool blunted the cellular sensitivity to sulfide-stimulated aerobic glycolysis and enhanced its oxidation to thiosulfate. In contrast, sulfide did not affect flux through the oxidative pentose phosphate pathway or the TCA cycle. Knockdown of sulfide quinone oxidoreductase, which commits H2S to oxidation, sensitized cells to sulfide-stimulated aerobic glycolysis. Finally, we observed that sulfide decreased ATP levels in cells. The dual potential of H2S to activate oxidative phosphorylation at low concentrations, but inhibit it at high concentrations, suggests that it might play a role in tuning electron flux and, therefore, cellular energy metabolism, particularly during cell proliferation.

Highlights

  • H2S is a respiratory poison that targets complex IV [3]

  • The oxidation pathway begins with the conversion of H2S to a persulfide in a reaction catalyzed by the inner mitochondrial membrane protein, sulfide quinone oxidoreductase (SQOR) [12, 13]

  • We examined the kinetics of sulfide loss under plate and suspension culture conditions that are routinely used in our laboratory, as a prelude to characterizing its effects on energy metabolism

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Summary

Introduction

H2S is a respiratory poison that targets complex IV [3]. It is an endogenously synthesized metabolite and a product of at least three enzymes in the sulfur metabolic network [4, 5]. A ~2- to 3-fold enhancement of glucose consumption and lactate production rates was observed at 100 μM sulfide in other malignant cell lines (HCT116, DLD-1, and 143B) as well (Fig. 3, C and D).

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